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The Epidemic Of Meningitis Epidemic

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The first recorded Meningitis epidemic occurred in Geneva in 1805, and shortly afterward several other outbreaks in Europe and the United States were recorded as well. Then, thirty-five years later, the first outbreak in Africa was recorded. The African Meningitis outbreaks became much more common in the 20th century. News Medical stated that “The first major epidemic was reported in Nigeria and Ghana from 1905-1908.” In the earliest reports, large numbers of people died from this disease. The first evidence found that linked Meningitis with a bacterial infection was written by Anton Vaykeslbaum, an Austrian bacteriologist, in 1887. This discovery led to many other people conducting research of their own, and “organisms causing Meningitis were identified in the later 19th century including: Streptococcus, Neisseria Meningitidis, and Haemophilus Influenzae” (History).
More symptoms of the condition were found by the end of the 19th century. Russian physician Vladimir Kernig (1840-1971) described the symptoms of Meningitis in 1884, and in 1899, Polish physician Jozef Brudzinski (1874-1917) conducted more research to expand on Kernig’s findings. “The signs of the disease were thus called Kernig’s sign and Brudzinski’s sign in 1882 and 1909 respectively. By the second half of the 20th century influenza viruses A and B, adenovirus were found to be linked to Meningitis as well”. In 1968, after more research on the matter, AA Smorodintsev found evidence that showed that “there are

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