The Health of Nations: The Campaign to End Polio and Eradicate Epidemic Diseases
By (Author) Karen Bartlett
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
1st May 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Infectious and contagious diseases
Coping with / advice about illness and specific health conditions
Medicine: general issues
Popular science
Epidemiology and Medical statistics
History of medicine
614.4
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 22mm
No one will ever again die from smallpox. With the battle against that most terrible of the ministers of death won, an unprecedented humanitarian coalition has now turned its attention to polio, malaria and measles. While recent outbreaks of Ebola and Zika might suggest that the idea of an end to epidemic disease is nothing more than a pipe-dream, this brave new world may actually be a future within our grasp. InThe Health of NationsKaren Bartlett provides a dramatic account of the history of eradication and takes us to the front line of modern campaigns. Through the eyes of those working in the field, we see innovations and unique collaborations across cultural divides; we witness the perseverance and resilience of the quest to vaccinate every child in spite of war and strife. Taking us from the high-tech labs of the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta to the villages of Nigeria and the remotest areas of the Middle East,The Health of Nationsis both urgent and riveting, revealing what weve achieved and how we might yet win the battles to come.
A fantastic story about the oddballs and outcasts, hippies and billionaires who have saved millions and millions of lives. As exciting as a thriller and with a happy ending that gives us hope for humankind.
-- Johan Norberg, author of ProgressWell-researched and accessible Her writing is clear yet nuanced, and offers compassion, a broad respect for history, and the skills of a strong storyteller.
* CHOICE Magazine *Bartlett makes it abundantly clear that research to reduce the impact of infectious disease is progressing but that politics, budgetary constraints, competing priorities, and ego clashes are serious impediments.
* Kirkus *Anyone interested in public health and its interface with politics will find both hope and frustration herea fascinating look at epidemiology and the challenges that public health workers face.
* Library Journal *This book is so engaging that I read it in one sittingI recommend it in the highest possible terms.
-- W. Ian Lipkin, director of the Center for Infection and Immunity, Columbia Universitydescribes the heroic efforts, the thrill of success, the challenges and the tragedy of failure[it] kept me turning the pages until late in the night.
-- Nicholas Grassly, professor in Vaccine Epidemiology, Imperial College LondonTimely.
* Publishers Weekly *A deft combination of history and palatable scientific reportage.
* Geographical *Karen Bartlettis a journalist, film-maker andSunday Timesbestselling author whose writing has appeared in theSunday Times,The Times,Guardian, Newsweek,New StatesmanandWired. Previously she worked with Nelson Mandela and United World Colleges, the Fabian Society, and as director of the human rights campaign group Charter88. She lives in Barnet, London.