I always thought I’d missed a lot not having been born in the 19th century. From The Topeka Capital-Journal: ...
Cases of the 19th century disease are continuing to rise after peaking last year - prompting officials to declare a "serious ...
The tuberculosis epidemic also led to the ... labeled the "the revolt against the whisker." Up until the late 19th century, spitting in public was considered acceptable social behavior in America ...
explaining that tuberculosis once killed rich and poor indiscriminately, but after the late-19th-century advent of germ theory, it became a “disease of the poor and marginalized.” Green ...
As the scientific knowledge of tuberculosis progressed, so too did the prejudice towards people with the disease. Once it was learned that TB was not in fact hereditary, but was transmitted ...
Kansas is experiencing its largest tuberculosis outbreak, with 67 active cases reported across Wyandotte and Johnson counties ...
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In the 19th century, diseases that are relatively uncommon today were major causes of death in the United States. Infectious diseases such as cholera, dysentery, and tuberculosis, often referred ...
At the beginning of the 19th century, though there had been some ... He identified the bacteria that cause anthrax, tuberculosis and cholera. Koch was very thorough. To isolate the anthrax ...
Once a feared and incurable disease in Japan, patients with tuberculosis fell for the ... mortality rates in Japan from the last half of 19th century to the first half of the 20th century.