Daschuk J W, Hackett Paul, MacNeil Scott
School of Public Policy, University of Regina.
Can Bull Med Hist. 2006;23(2):307-30. doi: 10.3138/cbmh.23.2.307.
This paper examines the explosion of tuberculosis infections among First Nations communities of western Canada during the critical period from Canada's acquisition of the Northwest to the early 1880s. In the early 1870s, the disease was relatively rare among the indigenous population of the plains. Within a few years, the situation changed dramatically. By the early 1880s, TB was widely recognized to be the primary cause of morbidity and mortality among First Nations populations. Rather than direct infection from the burgeoning European population in the region, the explosion of the disease was caused by sudden ecological, economic, and political changes in the west that were primarily the result of the imposition of Canadian hegemony.
本文考察了从加拿大获得西北地区到19世纪80年代初这一关键时期,加拿大西部原住民社区结核病感染的激增情况。在19世纪70年代初,这种疾病在平原地区的原住民中相对罕见。几年内,情况发生了巨大变化。到19世纪80年代初,结核病被广泛认为是原住民人口发病和死亡的主要原因。该疾病的激增并非源于该地区不断增长的欧洲人口的直接感染,而是西部突然发生的生态、经济和政治变化所致,这些变化主要是加拿大霸权强加的结果。