Fairchild A L, Oppenheimer G M
Program in the History of Public Health and Medicine, Columbia School of Public Health, New York City, NY 10032-2625, USA.
Am J Public Health. 1998 Jul;88(7):1105-17. doi: 10.2105/ajph.88.7.1105.
Tuberculosis (TB) began to decline in the Western world in the mid- to late 1800s. In the United States, the disease receded until the mid-1980s, when that trend was reversed. Although the TB epidemic in the United States subsided in response to public health interventions, it sparked a controversy regarding the relative value of targeted public health measures vs broad social reform. That controversy, which echoed earlier debates calling for structural reform over public health programs, was further strengthened by the historical and demographic studies of Thomas McKeown. His influential thesis maintains that clinical and primary prevention efforts had little effect on TB mortality. In this paper, the historical literature is used to examine whether public health had a significant impact on the decline of TB mortality rates in several countries. Specifically, the paper describes the arguments for and data affirming the efficacy of 2 major public health interventions over time: segregation of those infected with pulmonary TB and eradication of bovine TB. This review finds support for the hypothesis that public health measures, along with other factors, led to falling rates of TB mortality beginning in the late 19th century.
19世纪中后期,结核病(TB)在西方世界开始减少。在美国,这种疾病的发病率持续下降,直到20世纪80年代中期,这一趋势发生逆转。尽管美国的结核病疫情因公共卫生干预措施而有所缓解,但它引发了一场关于针对性公共卫生措施与广泛社会改革相对价值的争论。这场争论呼应了早期要求对公共卫生项目进行结构改革的辩论,托马斯·麦克基翁的历史和人口统计学研究进一步强化了这一争论。他的有影响力的论点认为,临床和一级预防措施对结核病死亡率影响甚微。在本文中,历史文献被用来检验公共卫生是否对几个国家结核病死亡率的下降产生了重大影响。具体而言,本文描述了随着时间推移支持两种主要公共卫生干预措施有效性的论据和数据:对肺结核感染者进行隔离以及根除牛结核病。这篇综述支持了这样一种假设,即从19世纪末开始,公共卫生措施与其他因素共同导致了结核病死亡率的下降。