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Patterns of smallpox mortality in London, England,...
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Patterns of smallpox mortality in London, England, over three centuries

Abstract

Abstract Smallpox is unique among infectious diseases in the degree to which it devasted human populations, its long history of control interventions, and the fact that it has been successfully eradicated. Mortality from smallpox in London, England, was carefully documented, weekly, for nearly 300 years, providing a rare and valuable source for the study of ecology and evolution of infectious disease. We describe and analyze smallpox mortality in London from 1664 to 1930. We digitized the weekly records published in the London Bills of Mortality and the Registrar General’s Weekly Returns. We annotated the resulting time series with a sequence of historical events that appear to have influenced smallpox dynamics in London. We present a spectral analysis that reveals how periodicities in smallpox dynamics changed over decades and centuries, and how these changes were related to control interventions and public health policy changes. We also examine how the seasonality of smallpox epidemics changed from the 17th to 20th centuries in London.

Authors

Krylova O; Earn DJD

Publication date

September 16, 2019

DOI

10.1101/771220

Preprint server

bioRxiv

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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