The Epidemic as a Social Event
- 1 October 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Health Services
- Vol. 7 (4) , 681-705
- https://doi.org/10.2190/rkrq-wv6e-dv53-vatt
Abstract
The concept of disease causation has changed twice, first from natural to social determining factors, and, second, from determination by social conditions to determination by stressful social relations. These changes roughly parallel the emergence of industrial capital and its change from a highly individualistic and competitive process to a “social” process. In this article, “epidemics” are treated as social events that occur amidst these changes in disease and the economic organization of society. Nineteenth-century epidemics occurred when business attempted to solve its economic problems by creating dramatic gaps between the social needs of an expanding labor force and available goods and services. The coincidence of periodic crises in production and in health ensured that “epidemics” would be occasions for labor to struggle against injustice, not simply sickness. And workers demonstrated a capacity for self-organization during epidemics that forced municipal authorities to reform fundamentally their organization of work, the market, and social service. After 1900, “reform” was a permanent part of capital's developmental strategy. The new “social” capitalist sought to organize work politically, far beyond the factory, and to extract “value” not from blue-collar workers alone but from all social activity. These developments reduced mortality due to infectious and childhood disease. But they also created the new epidemics of chronic stress. Despite the mystification of social etiology by medicine, the identity of the disease process with more general means of social reproduction indicates that illness is now “endopolic,” the product not of nature but of historically specific political and economic decisions and processes.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Modern Rise of Population.Population and Development Review, 1977
- The Impact of Colonialism on Health and Health Services in TanzaniaInternational Journal of Health Services, 1977
- Prosperity as a Cause of DeathInternational Journal of Health Services, 1977
- Hypertension as a Disease of Modern SocietyInternational Journal of Health Services, 1975
- A Larger Perspective on the Flexner ReportInternational Journal of Health Services, 1975
- Socioeconomic causes of the recent rise in death rates for 15–24-yr-oldsSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1975
- The Fiscal Crisis of the StatePublished by Springer Nature ,1973
- An interpretation of the modern rise of population in EuropePopulation Studies, 1972
- Socio-Economic Differentials in Mortality from Chronic DiseasesSocial Problems, 1957
- AMERICAN MEDICAL PRACTICE IN THE PERSPECTIVES OF A CENTURYThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1945