Contingent contagionism: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 10:47, 10 February 2025

Contingent contagionism was a concept in 19th-century medical writing and epidemiology before the germ theory, used as a qualified way of rejecting the application of the term contagious disease for a particular infection. For example, it could be stated that cholera, or typhus, was not contagious in a healthy atmosphere, but might be contagious in an impure atmosphere. Contingent contagionism covered a wide range of views between contagionist, and anti-contagionist such as held by supporters of the miasma theory.

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