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Title:Sweetness and fever? Sugar production, 'aedes aegypti', and dengue fever in Natal, South Africa, 1926-1927
Author:Rotz, Philip D.
Year:2016
Periodical:South African Historical Journal (ISSN 1726-1686)
Volume:68
Issue:3
Pages:286-303
Language:English
Geographic term:South Africa
Subjects:infectious diseases
epidemics
sugar
1920-1929
External link:https://doi.org/10.1080/02582473.2016.1246590
Abstract:In the late 1970s, James Goodyear offered 'a new perspective' on the history of yellow fever in the Caribbean and coastal United States. He argued that sugar processing, shipping, and refining created favourable ecological conditions for yellow fever's vector mosquito - aedes aegypti - by providing ready sugar for sustenance and plentiful breeding sites. Across 10 examples, Goodyear noted 'an apparent connection in time and place' between yellow fever 'and the presence of sugarcane cultivation, milling, refining, or shipping'. A handful of historians have mentioned or marshalled Goodyear's sugar connection. It appears no one has tested the argument. Nor has it been integrated into the literature on other viruses transmitted by aedes aegypti - like dengue. This essay uses an occurrence of dengue in another sugar region to test Goodyear's thesis. Did the sugar business impact the sprawling dengue epidemic that gripped Durban and the Natal coast in 1926-1927? This question is explored in two ways. First, by examining whether sugar cultivation, milling, and refining in 1920s Natal created favourable ecological conditions for aedes aegypti. And, second, by tracing 'sugar connections' in time and place based on accounts of the 1926-1927 epidemic. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]
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