142nd APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition

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Key to the city: Yellow fever, medical knowledge and the control of the port of Veracruz in the nineteenth century

142nd APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition (November 15 - November 19, 2014): http://www.apha.org/events-and-meetings/annual
Monday, November 17, 2014 : 10:35 AM - 10:55 AM

Mariola Espinosa, Ph.D. , Department of History, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA
Veracruz was the single most important port of New Spain and independent Mexico, the land's link to Caribbean and the broader Atlantic world.  It was also notoriously unhealthful.  Foreigners who arrived at the port, natives of the Mexican highlands, and even many of the most prominent Veracruzanos sought to spend as little time within the city's walls as possible.  Situated in the narrow band of tropical lowlands along Mexico's gulf coast, Veracruz hosted endemic yellow fever, the most feared disease in the western hemisphere during the nineteenth century.  During the first half of the century, a period that witnessed Mexico's transition from colony to independence as well as its partition by conquest, the city was repeatedly contested by the armies of Spain, France, Mexico, and the United States.  This paper will examine how evolving medical understandings of yellow fever shaped military strategies of both the invaders and the defenders who sought to control this port city and so the key route to and from central Mexico.

Learning Areas:

Other professions or practice related to public health
Public health or related research

Learning Objectives:
Identify the ways in which understandings of disease play into historical events. Evaluate how medical professionals have succeeded and failed to influence policy makers.

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: This is part of my own, single-authored, academic project. I am an expert in the history of fever in the Caribbean.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.