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The Effectiveness of Means of Controlling Communicable Diseases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 October 2009

Kenneth S. Warren
Affiliation:
The Picower Institute for Medical Research

Abstract

Most communicable diseases are caused by infectious agents that are not visible to the naked eye, which led earlier societies to believe in miasmas and control by quarantine. Although microscopes revealed the agents in the eighteenth century, they were not associated with disease syndromes until the late nineteeth century. Today, vaccines are the most cost-effective means of control.

Type
Special Section: Vaccines and Public Health: Assessing Technologies and Public Policies
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

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