Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/26071
Author(s): Almeida, M. A.
Editor: Francisco G. Nunes
Elsa Pegado
Date: 2021
Title: Fear in epidemic crisis: A historic approach
Book title/volume: Societal health notebooks: Mental health and well-being
Pages: 65 - 73
Reference: Almeida, M. A. (2021). Fear in epidemic crisis: A historic approach. Em Francisco G. Nunes, Elsa Pegado (Eds.). Societal health notebooks: Mental health and well-being (pp. 65-73). Iscte - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/26071
ISSN: 2184-9676
Keywords: Newspapers
Epidemics
Fear
Guilt
Punishment
Abstract: Mental health in epidemic periods is a recurrent theme, as well as epidemics themselves. Based on an investigation of news and advertisements published in the generalist press, we became aware of the importance of disseminating scientific knowledge to a wide audience and of the themes addressed in these periods of health crises, which affected the economy, society and politics. This article addresses the effect that new diseases had on the more intimate behaviour of affected populations. From the ancestral fear of hospitals, places associated with a certain death, to the fear of the unknown, in the face of diseases whose causes and their treatments had not yet been identified by science. The sanitary measures applied by the authorities have always aroused antagonistic reactions due to the deprivations to which the affected populations were subject. From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, daily newspapers were fundamental vehicles in the transmission of scientific knowledge, health advice and standards, and the discussions that these novelties have raised.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIES-CLN - Capítulos de livros nacionais

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