Department of Chemistry and Life Science, United States Military Academy, ATTN: MADN-CHM, 646 Swift Road, West Point, NY 10996.
Uniformed Services University School of Medicine, 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda, MD 20814.
Mil Med. 2020 Dec 30;185(11-12):e2104-e2109. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usaa226.
Military installations are at increased risk for the transmission of infectious disease. Personnel who live and train on military installations live and train near one another facilitating disease transmission. An understanding of historical sanitation and hygiene can inform modern practices. This is especially pertinent considering the continuing rise of variants of infectious diseases, such as the recent pandemic of the 2019 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. In this article, we review the rise and decline of infectious disease at the United States Military Academy (USMA) during the period spanning 1890 through 1910, and the public health interventions used to combat disease spread.
Primary data regarding cadet illness were acquired from the historical archives of the USMA. These included annual reports, clinical admission records, casualty ledgers, and sanitation reports. Unpublished documents from the medical history of USMA provide periodic trends of health among cadets because of infectious disease.
Between 1890 and 1910, the USMA at West Point was confronted with cases of influenza, measles, mumps, scarlet fever, smallpox, typhus, and malaria. In response, a series of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) were instituted to curb the spread of infectious disease. These interventions most likely proved effective in suppressing the transmission of communicable diseases. The most common and arguably the most effective NPI was the physical separation of the sick from the well.
The USMA experience mirrored what was occurring in the larger U.S. Army in the early 20th century and may serve as a model for the application of NPIs in response to modern infectious diseases resulting from novel or unknown etiologies.
军事设施传染病传播风险增加。居住和训练在军事设施的人员彼此靠近,便于疾病传播。了解历史上的卫生和清洁情况可以为现代实践提供信息。考虑到传染病变种(如最近的 2019 年严重急性呼吸系统综合症冠状病毒 2 大流行)的持续增加,这一点尤其重要。在本文中,我们回顾了 1890 年至 1910 年期间美国军事学院(USMA)传染病的上升和下降情况,以及用于控制疾病传播的公共卫生干预措施。
关于学员疾病的主要数据是从 USMA 的历史档案中获得的。这些包括年度报告、临床入院记录、伤亡登记簿和卫生报告。USMA 医学历史中的未发表文件提供了由于传染病导致学员健康的定期趋势。
在 1890 年至 1910 年期间,西点军校面临流感、麻疹、腮腺炎、猩红热、天花、斑疹伤寒和疟疾的病例。作为回应,采取了一系列非药物干预措施(NPIs)来遏制传染病的传播。这些干预措施很可能有效地抑制了传染病的传播。最常见且可以说是最有效的 NPI 是将病人与健康人分开。
USMA 的经验反映了 20 世纪初美国陆军中发生的情况,并且可以作为针对新型或未知病因引起的现代传染病应用非药物干预措施的模型。