Why Pandemics Matter to the History of U.S. State Development

Q2 Arts and Humanities
S. Colbrook
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

When a new strain of influenza circled the globe in the fall and winter of 1918, it swept through the United States at terrifying speed, infecting at least 25 million Americans—roughly one-quarter of the population—over the next two years. Based on any metric, the pandemic was the country's largest mass-mortality episode of the twentieth century, killing approximately 675,000 Americans and surpassing the death toll of World War I. Even as the virus struck the United States with unprecedented ferocity, however, the federal government left most public health decisions to the states, producing a disjointed and hyper-localized approach to a crisis that was national and global in scope. In the absence of a strong federal role, state governments carved out their own policy paths, adopting widely divergent strategies to stem the spread of the disease. This preventive playing field was wildly uneven. Some states were well-equipped with robust public health infrastructures; others lacked the tools to manage the disease's rampant spread.
为什么流行病对美国国家发展的历史如此重要
1918年秋冬,一种新的流感病毒在全球肆虐,并以惊人的速度席卷美国,在接下来的两年里,感染了至少2500万美国人——大约占美国人口的四分之一。无论以何种标准衡量,这场大流行都是美国20世纪最大的大规模死亡事件,造成大约67.5万美国人死亡,超过了第一次世界大战的死亡人数。尽管这种病毒以前所未有的猛烈程度袭击了美国,但联邦政府还是把大多数公共卫生决策交给了各州,对这场全国性和全球性的危机采取了一种脱节的、高度地方化的方法。在缺乏强有力的联邦角色的情况下,各州政府制定了自己的政策路径,采取了大相径庭的策略来阻止疾病的传播。这种预防性的竞争环境极不平衡。一些州拥有完善的公共卫生基础设施;其他国家缺乏控制疾病猖獗传播的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Modern American History
Modern American History Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
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