In the last hundred years, the name of the game in housing and work has been density.
Since 2007, more people globally live in the worlds urban centers than outside of them. In America specifically, that number goes up to 80%. Higher density urban development has come with some costs, like increases in rent across the board relative to wages. The move to cities may, however, have given us a surprising benefit: making us more resistant to pandemics.
At first, such a statement would seem strange, paradoxical even. The idea of heading for the hills to escape a pandemic has been with us at least as long as Boccaccios Decameron, a 14th century work that has a troupe of ten young nobles hiding out in the Italian countryside to escape the Black Death.
How could living closer together make us more resistant to outbreaks of disease?
Thats precisely what I thought, but as the research bears out, one unlikely key to fighting off diseases like Coronavirus may very well be our greater density of settlement.
Lets compare, for example, the Coronavirus outbreak of 2019-2020 with its most obvious historical parallel: the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic. The case-mortality rate, that is the rate at which infected people die from the disease, is surprisingly comparable for the two diseases. The Spanish flus was somewhere north of 2.5% (although sources disagree on the actual death toll and, thus, the mortality rate), whereas COVID sits at a respectable 2.2%. Its not exactly an apples-to-apples comparison, but remarkable when you look at the disparities in impact.
Whereas Spanish Flu killed around 675 thousand Americans out of a population of 103.2 million (0.65%), Coronaviruss death toll is 248 thousand (as of the writing of this article) of a population of 331 million (0.0007%). Even if Spanish Flu were a full 1% deadlier than Coronavirus, something would have to account for the dramatic drop in mortality.
Now, some obvious explanations would be hygiene practices, knowledge of disease and access to medicine and treatment. Of these, only the third actually makes any real sense. Allow me to explain.
The Spanish Flu pandemic was over a century ago, yes, but hand-washing had been an understood method of preventing communicable disease spread since the 1850s. Even today, with our myriad of disinfecting sanitizers, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) still recommends washing ones hands thoroughly with soap and water above any other preventative hygiene measure. True, they didnt bathe as much, but having itchy skin and oily hair wont give someone the flu.
I would argue the average person in 1918 knew about as much as the average person in 2020 does about disease. They knew it was spread by sick people, through fluids and breath droplets, and that they should wear masks and keep their distance from people. Masking and social distancing are nothing new, they were tried and true measures imposed during the 1918 pandemic. True, the average American in 1918 wouldnt really have had a firm grasp of the germ theory of disease, but its worth pointing out that you dont really need that information to keep yourself healthy. There might have been other unhygienic practices that were making them sick in other ways, but as for communicable diseases, they understood what they needed to.
No, the only real explanation lies in access to medicine and treatment. First off, there is the quality of therapeutic medicine. In 1918, doctors and nurses had few options for treating influenza patients. Once someone had contracted the disease, they merely had to treat the symptoms and wait for it to pass. Cold compresses to the head, aspirin, water, food and oxygen administered through a mask were the extent of what most patients would have gotten while ill. Add to this the fact that many patients were cared for at home, thus not only spreading the disease throughout the household but also unable to receive professional medical care.
This is where we return to COVID-19. Not only do we now have better treatments available, but we also have better access to those treatments. How exactly? More people now live closer to a hospital or clinic with high quality care.
According to a June, 2020 study from Johns Hopkins, the density of an area had no statistically significant effect on Coronavirus infection rates (in other words, your likelihood of infection didnt vary by population density of your county) and that mortality rates in highly dense counties were lower, sometimes by as much as 11.3%. The researchers theorized this had to do with greater access to medical care and a higher quality of that care.
Now, that doesnt get American cities off the hook just yet. The researchers also found, higher coronavirus infection and COVID-19 mortality rates in counties are more related to the larger context of metropolitan size in which counties are located. Large metropolitan areas with a higher number of counties tightly linked together through economic, social and commuting relationships are the most vulnerable to the pandemic outbreaks.
In other words, its not the density and high population of urban areas that makes them vulnerable, but the high degree of traffic between urban areas and their suburbs and exurbs. If anything, the results advocate against low density suburban housing, from a purely disease-prevention standpoint.
I personally am not a fan of city-living, but I must admit that if housing was more dense and relied less on commuting, America would likely be more resistant to disease outbreaks.
In a strange twist, running off into the countryside like Boccaccios young storytellers might not make you any safer from the plague.
Photo Credit / Star Tribune
Continued here:
Lessons from the pandemic: density may be the best policy - The Pacer
- UNM researcher is advancing HIV Prevention and Health Equity for Native Americans - Albuquerque Journal - November 16th, 2024
- CVS Health expands access to primary care services at select MinuteClinic locations - CVS Health - November 16th, 2024
- Decrease in syphilis diagnoses among gay men most likely linked to preventive antibiotic use - NBC News - November 16th, 2024
- Breakthrough T1D Leads Effort to Make Screening for T1D Part of Recommended Preventive Services in the US - cnhinews.com - November 16th, 2024
- Pakistan Has The Worlds Highest Diabetes Prevalence - And Lacks Focus On Prevention - Health Policy Watch - November 16th, 2024
- Herbal medicine shows great potential in treating and preventing dementia - Earth.com - November 16th, 2024
- Health and Wellness Market to Grow by USD 1.93 Trillion (2024-2028), Driven by Rising Focus on Health Programs, AI-Powered Report Highlights Market... - November 16th, 2024
- Care for body and mind. And important prevention. - KODA Storyboard - November 16th, 2024
- The 8th World Integrative Medicine Congress - Preventive Care as a Priority, Universal Health for All - openPR - November 16th, 2024
- World Pneumonia Day 2024: 6 symptoms of pneumonia in the elderly - Health shots - November 16th, 2024
- Mercks Clesrovimab (MK-1654), an Investigational Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Preventative Monoclonal Antibody, Significantly Reduced Incidence... - October 22nd, 2024
- New Strategies to Extend the HIV Treatment Cascade for CVD Prevention - Infectious Disease Special Edition - October 22nd, 2024
- Shea fights breast cancer with family support - nwestiowa.com - October 22nd, 2024
- Cancer hospitals' cancer prevention plansand what's foiling them - Newsweek - October 22nd, 2024
- The Wright Medicine: Breast Cancer Awareness Month a time to tout preventive measures - Valley Advantage - October 22nd, 2024
- Prevention and Management of Urolithiasis With Parsley and Barley Among the Hail Population, Saudi Arabia: Is It Fact or Not? - Cureus - October 22nd, 2024
- Leveraging Patient Data for Early Healthcare Interventions: Insights from Gerard Hanratty of Browne Jacobson - Healthcare Digital - October 22nd, 2024
- Why Wes Streetings prevention agenda is sinister - The Spectator - October 22nd, 2024
- An injectable HIV-prevention drug is highly effective but wildly expensive - NBC News - September 13th, 2024
- Top preventive health tips your internist wants you to know - American Medical Association - September 13th, 2024
- National Falls Prevention Week: Turning awareness into action - McKnight's Long-Term Care News - September 13th, 2024
- UToledo Health Mobile Clinic Takes Preventative Care on the Road - UToledo News - September 13th, 2024
- Twice-Yearly Injection Cuts HIV Risk by 96%, But Will Cost Cut Access? - The Mercury - Manhattan, Kansas - September 13th, 2024
- Von der Leyen to ramp up EU healthcare union and focus on preventative treatment - MedWatch - September 13th, 2024
- Kate Middleton's preventative chemotherapy explained: The gruelling drugs that are proven to stop disease retu - Daily Mail - September 13th, 2024
- Personalised prevention in England - The Health Foundation - September 13th, 2024
- Stay on top of your fur baby's health: the importance of scheduling routine vet visits - FoxReno.com - May 17th, 2023
- Preventive healthcare - May 9th, 2023
- What Is Preventive Health and Why Is It Important? - May 9th, 2023
- What Is Preventive Medicine & Why Do We Need It? | AUC - February 16th, 2023
- Preventive Medicine | Journal | ScienceDirect.com by Elsevier - December 3rd, 2022
- Migraine - Diagnosis and treatment - Mayo Clinic - December 3rd, 2022
- Functional Medicine of Idaho | Preventative Root Cause Medicine - December 3rd, 2022
- These 2 Staten Island nurses believe IV hydration drips and vitamin shots are key to long-term health - SILive.com - December 3rd, 2022
- CNBCTV-18 and IIM-K's India@2047 Leadership Series: Challenges and opportunities in the fintech and healthcare sectors - Forbes India - December 3rd, 2022
- As N.W.T. mulls health coverage changes, petition calls for preventative HIV drug to be free - CBC.ca - September 20th, 2022
- EU regulator backs wider use of AstraZeneca COVID therapy - Reuters - September 20th, 2022
- Choose integrative medicine for health and wellness - Technique - September 20th, 2022
- The high hospital bills we make victims of rape and sexual violence pay - Vox.com - September 20th, 2022
- 4 Anti-Aging Products Youre Using All Wrong, According To Skincare Experts - SheFinds - September 20th, 2022
- Why Now is the Time to Double Down on Virtual Care - HIT Consultant - September 20th, 2022
- Tell Giselle: The price of good help is priceless - Wilkes Barre Times-Leader - September 20th, 2022
- Heron Therapeutics Announces U.S. FDA Approval of APONVIE (HTX-019) for the Prevention of Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting (PONV) - BioSpace - September 20th, 2022
- Pickleball injuries are on the rise: 5 preventive tips to keep you on the court - The Manual - September 20th, 2022
- The next big social movement and other takeaways from our regular meeting - POLITICO - September 20th, 2022
- 15 Mushrooms and How to Use Them in Vegan Cooking - VegNews - September 20th, 2022
- Use of honey in the management of Chemotherapy | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - September 20th, 2022
- Celebrity Strategy Consultant Predicts What Will Be The Most Impactful Area In The Pharmaceutical Industry - Forbes - September 20th, 2022
- C2C Care Course The Preservation of Our Global Photographic Heritage: Here, There and Everywhere - aam-us.org - August 3rd, 2022
- Loneliness: Causes, Effects And Prevention Forbes Health - Forbes - August 3rd, 2022
- Prevention and wellness is the new model, a leader from Henry Ford Health System says - Becker's Hospital Review - August 3rd, 2022
- FACT SHEET: White House Summit on Building Lasting Eviction Prevention Reform - The White House - August 3rd, 2022
- Getting Back to Employer Health and Wellness Programs - Cone Health - August 3rd, 2022
- Do ICDs Still Work in Primary Prevention Given Today's HF Meds? - Medscape - August 3rd, 2022
- Alzheimer's-defying brain offers clues to treatment, prevention - Harvard Gazette - August 3rd, 2022
- Wind-fanned lightning fire prompted precautionary evacuation notices near Medical Springs Sunday evening - Baker City Herald - August 3rd, 2022
- Experts discuss importance of cancer screenings and early detection - Merck - August 3rd, 2022
- King Institute of Preventive Medicine and Research to test samples for monkeypox - The Hindu - August 3rd, 2022
- Consolidated guidelines on HIV, viral hepatitis and STI prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations - World - ReliefWeb - August 3rd, 2022
- Dr. Sanjay Gupta: While monkeypox cases rise, why are we waiting for the cavalry to rescue us? - CNN - August 3rd, 2022
- SCYNEXIS Announces U.S. Food and Drug Administration - GlobeNewswire - August 3rd, 2022
- Governor Whitmer declares August 2022 as Breastfeeding Month, highlights additional breastfeeding observances - Michigan (.gov) - August 3rd, 2022
- New student education program supports drug and alcohol abuse prevention - The Ohio State University News - July 25th, 2022
- Suicide prevention training for health care providers a first step in longer-term efficacy - University of Washington - July 25th, 2022
- Pharmalittle: Congress may miss deadline to pass FDA user-fee bill; ViiV is urged to lower price for its HIV prevention drug - STAT - July 25th, 2022
- Prevention of Bipolar Disorder Episodes: Is It Possible? - PsychCentral.com - July 25th, 2022
- GAO Found Gap in Dirty Bomb Prevention - Government Technology - July 25th, 2022
- Florida man in apparent medical distress crashes car through beach crowd before hitting the water - CNN - July 25th, 2022
- Study: Preventive care scarce in LGBTQ+ community - - Medical Marketing and Media - July 25th, 2022
- The rise of preventive insurance purchases in India - ETHealthWorld - July 25th, 2022
- Why Are My Feet Always Cold? Cold Feet Causes and Treatment - Prevention Magazine - July 25th, 2022
- Agency looking to open overdose prevention site in Saint John amid 'poisoned' drug supply - CBC.ca - July 25th, 2022
- UVA Expert Offers Insight on the Use of Dietary Supplements for Cancer Prevention - UVA Today - July 25th, 2022
- Alzheimer's: Targeting key protein in blood may slow progression - Medical News Today - July 25th, 2022
- NPPC, FAS focused on ASF prevention in the Philippines - MEAT+POULTRY - July 25th, 2022
- Implementation of IPT in people living with HIV | RMHP - Dove Medical Press - July 25th, 2022
- NL starts preventive vaccination against monkeypox in Amsterdam, The Hague - NL Times - July 25th, 2022
- Precautionary measures you can take against brain haemorrhage - Times of India - July 25th, 2022
- Acid Reflux and Liver Disease: Signs, Symptoms and Prevention - Healthline - July 25th, 2022
- What to do if you get an allergic reaction: symptoms, causes, and prevention - Fox News - July 25th, 2022