Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The deadly virus continued to strike cities, mostly eastern seaports and Gulf Coast cities, for the next two hundred years, killing hundreds, sometimes thousands in a single summer.

  2. May 28, 2020 · Carey estimated that out of a population of 50,000, about 17,000 left the city and 4,000 died. Later estimates put the death total as high as 5,000. Between 1793 and 1805, waves of yellow fever attacked northern ports in the U.S. Then the disease retreated south, where it persisted through the end of the 19th century.

  3. Between August 1 and November 9, 1793, approximately 11,000 people contracted yellow fever in the US capital of Philadelphia. Of that number, 5,000 people, 10 percent of the city’s population, died. The disease gets its name from the jaundiced eyes and skin of the victims.

  4. The first major American yellow fever epidemic hit Philadelphia in July 1793 and peaked during the first weeks of October. Philadelphia, then the nation’s capital, was the most cosmopolitan city in the United States.

    • Early Diagnostics
    • Modern Diagnostics For Yellow Fever
    • Modern Yellow Fever Research

    The discovery of the causative agent of yellow fever was a decades-long process. While Cuban physician Carlos Finlay first described the Aedes aegypti mosquito as the carrier of the disease in 1886, he was ridiculed for this theory. Finlay’s discovery was accepted 20 years later only after U.S. Army scientists working with Dr. Walter Reed confirmed...

    The last major outbreak of yellow fever in the U.S. occurred in 1905 in New Orleans. Today, yellow fever is endemic in tropical and subtropical regions of South America and Africa. While the development of a yellow fever vaccine (Theiler won a Nobel prize for this work) has saved countless lives over the years, the global burden of this disease is ...

    Prevention of yellow fever primarily relies on vaccination, as there is no antiviral treatment available for the disease. While the live-attenuated vaccine has been demonstrated to be safe and effective (lifelong protection offered from one shot within 30 days of immunization in 99% of people who receive it), production can be slow and result in a ...

  5. Oct 18, 2022 · The first began when yellow fever struck Philadelphia in 1793, killing 5,000 of the city’s 50,000 inhabitants, and continued to 1805 in a series of terrifying epidemics that scourged New York and Philadelphia. Close attention to the nation’s first epidemic reveals striking similarities with its most recent.

  6. 1851. September 13: Walter Reed is born in Gloucester County, Virginia. 1853. New Orleans, the U.S. city in which yellow fever was most prevalent, suffers its worse exposure to date, with...

  1. People also search for