Article

Smallpox and American Indians revisited.

History Department, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA.
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences (impact factor: 0.71). 03/2010; 65(4):445-77. DOI:10.1093/jhmas/jrq005
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Smallpox ravaged the people of Europe and the Americas in the early modern era. Why it was a catastrophic cause of death for American Indians that helped lead to severe depopulation, but a manageable cause among Europeans that allowed continued population growth, has puzzled scholars. Research on variola continued after smallpox eradication in 1977, prompted in part by the fear that aerosolized smallpox might be used in bioterrorism. That research updates factors that may have aggravated smallpox lethality in American Indians, giving new information about infectivity, the proportion of people who may have contracted smallpox, the burden on infants of mothers who had not had smallpox, and the toll for pregnant women. This essay reviews old and new hypotheses about why so many in the New World died from smallpox using recent smallpox research and older sources.

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Keywords

aerosolized smallpox
 
American Indians
 
catastrophic cause
 
Europe
 
Europeans
 
helped lead
 
infectivity
 
new hypotheses
 
new information
 
New World
 
older sources
 
pregnant women
 
puzzled scholars
 
recent smallpox research
 
research updates factors
 
severe depopulation
 
smallpox
 
smallpox eradication
 
smallpox lethality
 
variola
 

James C Riley