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Cartographies of Disease: Maps, Mapping, and Medicine, New Expanded Edition Expanded Edition
Contributor(s): Koch, Tom (Author)
ISBN: 1589484673     ISBN-13: 9781589484672
Publisher: Esri Press
OUR PRICE:   $22.79  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: January 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Medical | Epidemiology
- Technology & Engineering | Cartography
- Technology & Engineering | Remote Sensing & Geographic Information Systems
Dewey: 614.42
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 7.5" W x 9.2" (2.50 lbs) 426 pages
 
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Publisher Description:

Cartographies of Disease: Maps, Mapping, and Medicine, new expanded edition, is a comprehensive survey of the technology of mapping and its relationship to the battle against disease. This look at medical mapping advances the argument that maps are not merely representations of spatial realities but a way of thinking about relationships between viral and bacterial communities, human hosts, and the environments in which diseases flourish.

Cartographies of Disease traces the history of medical mapping from its growth in the 19th century during an era of trade and immigration to its renaissance in the 1990s during a new era of globalization. Referencing maps older than John Snow's famous cholera maps of London in the mid-19th century, this survey pulls from the plague maps of the 1600s, while addressing current issues concerning the ability of GIS technology to track diseases worldwide. The original chapters have some minor updating, and two new chapters have been added. Chapter 13 attempts to understand how the hundreds of maps of Ebola revealed not simply disease incidence but the way in which the epidemic itself was perceived. Chapter 14 is about the spatiality of the disease and the means by which different cartographic approaches may affect how infectious outbreaks like ebola can be confronted and contained.


Contributor Bio(s): Koch, Tom: - Dr. Tom Koch is a clinical ethicist and gerontologist based in Canada. He is also an adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia, where he developed a series of teaching labs for medical geography. In 2005, he and coauthor, Kenneth Denike, were honored with an award for their paper on teaching medical geography through an analysis of John Snow's 1855 map of cholera in the Broad Street area of London.