Forget ‘great men’ – infection and disease are the really important forces in the development of humankind, believes public health specialist Jonathan Kennedy

Barts pathology museum is usually open to the public only by special appointment. But today, I’m in luck. I find myself with an unexpected open sesame in the form of Dr Jonathan Kennedy, the director of the MSc and iBSc global public health programmes at Barts and the London Medical School, and while he has his photograph taken up on one of its mezzanine floors, I’m free to wander around alone. (At least, I think I’m alone; the museum is nothing if not ghostly.)

On the same site as the hospital in the City of London, this purpose-built, glass-roofed Victorian building is home to about 4,000 medical specimens, the majority of them displayed on open shelves. Every part of the body is represented and every kind of illness and injury – though tracking down a particular condition can be tricky for the non-medical. When I finally find the gnarled, yellow spine of a patient who suffered from tuberculosis – I was after something that speaks to Kennedy’s new book, which is about infectious disease and its effect on human civilisation – it’s largely down to luck. The vertebrae in question just happen to be next to the museum’s most famous exhibit: the skull of John Bellingham, who assassinated the British prime minister, Spencer Perceval, in 1812.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Johnson the civil libertarian wants to have his voter ID card and eat it | Marina Hyde

The solution to the virtually nonexistent problem of voter fraud just happens…

Kylie: Tension review – Padam was just for starters…

(BMG)After this summer’s megahit single, Kylie Minogue remains firmly on the dancefloor…

‘The mother she’ll never meet’: young parents among UK Covid victims

As coronavirus deaths reach highest level since March, families pay tribute to…

Woman killed in Sydney attacks was trying to save her baby

Ash Good, who died in shopping centre stabbing spree after handing over…