From medical geography to germ theory in Colombia, 1860-1900
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Abstract
Before the consolidation of the germ theory of human diseases at the end of the
nineteenth century, medical explanations about disease causation were dominated by
the environmental notions of medical geography. This dissertation explores how
nineteenth-century Colombian physicians transformed the medical geographical
approach using the early concepts and technologies of the emerging Pasteurian germ
theory. I follow this transformation in the cases of periodic fevers (yellow fever and
malaria), continuous fevers (typhoid fever and typhus) and leprosy. The analysis
reveals that by mid century physicians had incorporated neo-Hippocratic versions of
disease causation and French medical geographical ideas in order to make sense of
disease of the warm, temperate and cold lands. Their conceptual network revolved
around the specific, predisposing and occasional causes in which climate and
geography played a determinant role. Evidence indicates that this was the case of
periodic fevers of the warm lands (yellow fever and malaria). I argue that the
“parasitic” hypothesis of yellow fever was accepted during the controversy around
the prophylactic inoculations inspired by Pasteurism that were applied in Colombia
in 1887. However, doctors struggled to reconcile the medical geographical and the
bacteriological perspective of both yellow fever and malaria. Continuous fevers, on
the other hand, were also framed within the medical geography scheme of disease
causation. I show how during the debates about typhoid fever and typhus happening
in the Colombian highlands during the 70s, 80s and 90s, doctors used medical
geographical notions and developed anti-pasteurian arguments, while the
international scientific community had identified the specific bacilli for typhoid
fever. Finally, I argue that the strong interest of Colombian doctors on leprosy –also
understood in neo-Hippocratic terms- that foster the search for local treatments based
on Pasteurism (antiseptics in the 1880s and serotherapy in the 1890s) also prompted
the extension of the bacteriological model and techniques to other diseases in those
decades.
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