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It is generally thought Filipinos possessed immunity to many of the Old World diseases that devastated American populations
Due to trading contacts with mainland Asia where some acute infections became endemic in the Christian era
Acute Infections Smallfox Measles Inluenza
The existence of immunity to such diseases in the Phils. has been generally been inferred from the absence of a dramatic decline in the population following European contact
Palaeopathological studies of Filipino populations are few
In any case of skeletal remains can only provide limited insight into the incidence of acute infections
Circumstancial Evidence is very important
Three main lines of investigation The existence of written sources The existence of unusually large number of early
dictionaries in native Filipino languages Examination of the pattern and level of
mortality with these acute infections
Reasons The demographic collapse of native peoples in
the America is generally attributed by the acute infections
Spread through face-to-face contact Not dependent on the existence of an insect,
rodent, or other vector for their propagation Short period of infection can lead to death Americas sixteenth – century epidemics
Acute infections confer life-long immunity on survivors
Required number of population for these diseases to become endemic
Measles – 200,000 to 300,000 people Smallpox – 100,000 to 200,000 people
Below these thresholds and where the population is dispersed,
The spread of disease is slow “Fade-outs” are common Immunity can only be acquired where there is
constant contact with an external source The Phil. Pre-Spanish time Population
About 1.5 million people Widely dispersed over 7,000 islands Significantly less than 100, 000 people per island Exceptions
Panay in the Visayas --Luzon the largest island --
Populations in different islands and regions did not form and generate the number of susceptible necessary to maintain acute infections
As a result, epidemics were dependent on acute infections being introduced from regions where they were endemic
Some may have arrived from other islands in the Southeast Asian archipelago where populations were of sufficient size to act as “boosters” in maintaining the chain of infection
Chinese sources indicate that smallpox arrived in china in the fourth century and had become endemic in the 11th century
Two centuries later it had established in Japan
There is some doubt that it had become established in Japan prior to the arrival of Europeans
Measles probably arrived in China about the same time as smallpox
By 1500 China had also been affected by epidemics of influenza, mumps, and chickenpox, and possibly plague and typhus.
Contacts between these regions and the Southeast Asian archipelago were increasing thereby greatly expanding opportunities for their spread
China’s distance to the Phils. is 650-700 miles, could take as six to eight days, though often longer
China’s travel to Japan take only seven to eight days
Several hundred crews and passengers that generally travelled on these trading vessels could easily maintain acute infections during the short journeys.
At the time of Spanish arrival about 12-15 ships were coming annually from mainland China
While Japanese raider-traders occasionally frequented the west and north coast of Luzon
There is little doubt that opportunities existed for the introduction of acute infections from the Asian mainland
Even though acute infections may have arrived in the Phils. From China and Japan, they may not have spread widely through the islands due to geographical and social barriers to their spread
Manila Mindoro Cebu Mindanao Jolo
Trades established channels into the interior through which diseases might be introduced
The population was dispersed and communications between and within the islands were slow
So many diseases would have died out before they reached a new group of people to infect
This pattern of frequent “fade-outs” meant that acute infections did not become endemic in the islands and therefore Filipino populations could not acquire immunity to them through constant exposure
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