Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-cnmwb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T09:32:30.977Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Plagues, pandemics and epidemics in Irish history prior to COVID-19 (coronavirus): what can we learn?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2020

B. D. Kelly*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Trinity College Dublin, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, Tallaght University Hospital, Dublin 24, Ireland
*
*Address for correspondence: B. D. Kelly, Department of Psychiatry, Trinity College Dublin, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, Tallaght University Hospital, Dublin 24, D24 NR0A, Ireland. (Email: brendan.kelly@tcd.ie)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objectives:

This paper seeks to provide a brief overview of epidemics and pandemics in Irish history and to identify any lessons that might be useful in relation to psychiatry in the context of COVID-19.

Methods:

A review of selected key reports, papers and publications related to epidemics and pandemics in Irish history was conducted.

Results:

Viruses, epidemics and pandemics are recurring features of human history. Early Irish sources record a broad array of plagues, pandemics and epidemics including bubonic plague, typhus, cholera, dysentery and smallpox, as well as an alleged epidemic of insanity in the 19th century (that never truly occurred). Like the Spanish flu pandemic (1918–20), COVID-19 (a new coronavirus) presents both the challenge of the illness itself and the problems caused by the anxiety that the virus triggers. Managing this anxiety has always been a challenge, especially with the Spanish flu. People with mental illness had particularly poor outcomes with the Spanish flu, often related to the large, unhygienic mental hospitals in which so many were housed.

Conclusions:

Even today, a full century after the Spanish flu pandemic, people with mental illness remain at increased risk of poor physical health, so it is imperative that multi-disciplinary care continues during the current outbreak of COVID-19, despite the manifest difficulties involved. The histories of previous epidemics and pandemics clearly demonstrate that good communication and solidarity matter, now more than ever, especially for people with mental illness.

Type
Historical Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine

A new coronavirus, COVID-19, was identified in China in late December 2019 and quickly spread around the world (World Health Organization, 2020a). While the majority of people who contract the virus have a relatively mild, self-limiting illness, it can be fatal (Wang, Reference Wang2020; Xu et al. Reference Xu, Wu, Jiang, Xu, Ying, Ma, Li, Wang, Zhang, Gao, Sheng, Cai, Qiu and Li2020; Yang et al. Reference Yang, Yu, Xu, Shu, Xia, Liu, Wu, Zhang, Yu, Fang, Yu, Wang, Pan, Zou, Yuan and Shang2020). Despite extensive public health measures, over 300 000 people were infected across 188 countries by March 2020 (Xiao & Torok, Reference Xiao and Torok2020). More than 13 000 had died. On 11 March, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a pandemic. By early April, 1.5 million people were infected, and there had been over 85 000 deaths (WHO, 2020b).

Viruses, epidemics and pandemics are recurring features of human history (Camus, Reference Camus1948; Garcia et al. Reference Garcia, Hernandez, Gorchakov, Murray and Hotez2015; Honigsbaum, Reference Honigsbaum2019). The global influenza pandemic that lasted from 1918 to 1920, also known as the Spanish flu, is, perhaps, the best remembered pandemic of recent times (Foley, Reference Foley2011; Honigsbaum, Reference Honigsbaum2018; Milne, Reference Milne2018). Public health responses to these events have changed considerably over time, but psychological responses appear more constant: mixtures of complacency, appropriate anxiety, excessive anxiety and panic (Kelly, Reference Kelly2020a).

These issues are especially to the fore in the current COVID-19 pandemic owing to unprecedented blanket media coverage of the outbreak (Cookson, Reference Cookson2020; Devlin & Boseley, Reference Devlin and Boseley2020; Economist, 2020; Giuffrida, Reference Giuffrida2020; Kelly, Reference Kelly2020b). Some of the material published and shared, especially on social media, has been misleading and unhelpful: falsehoods, panic and hysteria will only weaken efforts to halt the virus (Kelly, Reference Kelly2020c).

Against this background, this paper seeks to provide a brief overview of epidemics and pandemics in Irish history and to identify any lessons that might be useful in relation to psychiatry in the context of COVID-19.

Plagues, epidemics and other misfortunes in early Irish history

In 1856, Part V of the report of the Census of Ireland for 1851 was published, co-authored by William Donnelly (Registrar General and Chief Commissioner), Dr William Wilde (Assistant Commissioner) and Henry Wilkie (Acting Secretary) (Donnelly et al. Reference Donnelly, Wilde and Wilkie1856). Dr William Wilde, now best known as father of the playwright, Oscar, was a prominent surgeon and author of numerous works on medicine, archaeology and folklore (Wilson, Reference Wilson1942; Coakley, Reference Coakley2016). Wilde was knighted in 1864 owing in large part to his work on the census (Froggatt, Reference Froggatt1965; Froggatt, Reference Froggatt2016; Geary, Reference Geary2016).

The 1856 Census report that Wilde co-authored provided a fascinating summary of Ireland’s long history of outbreaks, epidemics and pandemics:

Having found that from the earliest period to which past chronicles refer down to the present time Ireland has suffered sometimes alone, and sometimes in common with Great Britain and the rest of Europe, from various epidemic pestilences, we collected and tabulated the circumstances attending them in the table attached to these introductory remarks. From an examination of this epitome of the most remarkable epidemic pestilences, as well as of the famines, epizootics, cosmical phenomena, and other circumstances, influencing, or supposed to influence mortality, we perceive that so far as the annals and records of the country afford information, Ireland has from the earliest period of its colonization to the present time been subjected to a series of dire calamities, affecting human life, arising either from causes originating within itself, or from its connexion with Great Britain and other parts of Europe (p.2).

The causes of these events were many and varied:

The literature of the times and the history of those early plagues, which devastated different parts of the world, show us that men usually endeavoured to account for such sudden outbursts of disease, either by the direct and miraculous interposition of Providence, or by some peculiar atmospheric condition, the manifestations of which were storms, hail, thunder, and lightning, unusual or sudden alterations of temperature, such as excessive heat, long continued drought, intense frost and snow, or great rains and inundations. Occasionally ‘signs and wonders’, eclipses of the sun or moon, comets, and certain prodigies and supernatural appearances in the heavens, are said to have been the forerunners of these disasters, affecting the animal or the vegetable world; and during the middle ages of the Christian era, the failure of crops, a murrain among cattle, or an epidemic affecting the human family, were often considered as punishments from heaven, for sacrilege or other crimes of that nature (p.2).

Wilde and colleagues showed a shrewd understanding of the epidemiology of infectious diseases that is just as relevant to COVID-19 as it was in ancient Ireland:

Many of the plagues from which this country suffered were continuations of those great waves of pestilence which had already passed (according to the general course of plagues) from the East, over the European continent, frequently carried along the track of human intercourse, by commercial dealings, or borne onward by hostile navies or invading armies; but others were more localised, were of domestic growth, and had their birth, and expended themselves within the circuit of this island - seldom spreading beyond its limits (p.2).

Exploring the early Irish literature, Wilde and colleagues found particularly ‘striking’ accounts of ‘the first and second outbreaks of the Blefed, or Buidhe Connail – the great Yellow Plague, which devastated Ireland in the sixth and seventh centuries’ (p.6). They went on to present a detailed ‘Table of Cosmical Phenomena, Epizootics, Famines and Pestilences in Ireland’ starting in ‘the Pagan or Pre-Christian Period’ and drawn, in large part, from the ‘Annals of the Four Masters’, chronicles of medieval Irish history complied in the 1630s. The first entry in the Table recounted the deaths of 5000 men and 4000 women in one week in ‘the place now called Tallaght near Dublin’ owing to ‘some sudden epidemic’ which was ‘the first recorded pestilence in Ireland’ (p. 41). The precise nature of this epidemic remains obscure.

The 1856 table compiled by Wilde and colleagues continues with an astonishing succession of epidemics, plagues, cosmic events and unfortunate occurrences, some of dubious veracity. The Annals of Innisfallen, for example, recorded that, in 569 AD there was ‘(Bolgach) smallpox amongst the people’ (p.47). Wilde and colleagues were sceptical: ‘This is the first notice of this disease in the Irish annals, and one of the earliest references thereto in any European authority. As it is not, however, verified in any other annal, the epidemic alluded to was probably the leprosy, then epidemic’.

The Annals of Boyle recorded ‘a great pestilence (mortalitas magna), that is the Buidhe Chonnaill’ in the (ominous) year of 666 (p.52). ‘Diarmaid and Blathmac, the two Kings of Ireland, died, as did Fechin of Fore, and many others thereof”. In 675, ‘there reigned a kind of great leprosie in Ireland this year, called the Pox, in Irish, Bolgagh’. This, according to Wilde and colleagues, ‘evidently was the small-pox, of which many distinguished persons died’.

Mysteries and tragedies abounded. In 678, ‘Lough Neagh was turned into blood’. The following year saw ‘universal pestilence’ as ‘England and Ireland were ravaged by it in 679; and in 680, during July, August and September, Rome was laid waste’. The year 695 saw ‘the cattle pestilence’ and there was ‘a great cow mortality’ in 707 (p.54). In 742, there was both ‘the Bolgach - small-pox’ and ‘dragons seen in the sky’ (p.55). In 814, there was ‘a great disease (Scath mor) and heavy sickness (Tromghalar)’ (p.59). Some entries in the Table are deeply obscure: in 847, for example, ‘Felym MacCriowhayn was overtaken by a great flux of the belly’. No further explanation is offered.

The Annals of Ulster recorded ‘a great Leprosy (Clamthruscad mor, scaly leprosy or mange) and running of blood (Ruith fola, Dysentery) upon the Gentiles of Dublin’ in 950 (p.63). Wilde and colleagues felt that this was an especially significant report:

These two notices would appear to apply to Syphilis, (and if so, to fix the introduction of it into Ireland), and the circumstances of the period tend to favour that idea. For some years before, there had been several Danish invasions, and immediately preceding the year 950 the Danes plundered a great part of Leinster, and took many captives - in one instance ‘upwards of three thousand persons’, so that the accession and spread of venereal affections is likely to have occurred at the time referred to.

Bubonic plague, typhus, cholera, dysentery, smallpox and the Spanish flu

The ‘Black Death’, or Bubonic plague, raged in Ireland from 1348 to 1350, and it is likely that between a quarter and a third of the population died during the first outbreak, according to Joseph Robins (Reference Robins1995) in his invaluable book, The Miasma: Epidemic and Panic in Nineteenth Century Ireland. There were several more epidemics of plague which only declined across Europe in the mid-17th century, at which point typhus and dysentery became the chief threats. Smallpox, too, was major cause of death in 18th-century Ireland. An epidemic of typhus developed between 1816 and 1819 and was followed by cholera in the 1830s.

Wilde and colleagues described an earlier outbreak of typhus in 1225, based on the Annals of the Four Masters (p.77), and demonstrated clear links between illness, famine and conflict:

An oppressive malady (Teidhm diofhulaing, irresistible pestilence) raged in the province of Connaught at this time; it was a heavy, burning sickness (Treabhlaid Tromteasaiglithi), which left the large towns desolate, without a single survivor’. This hot, heavy, death sickness, not sudden as the tamh, was probably our Irish typhus, which succeeded to the war and famine which desolated large portions of Ireland at this period; so that ‘woeful was the misfortune which God permitted to fall upon the best province in Ireland at that time for the young warriors did not spare each other, but preyed and plundered each other to the utmost of their power. Women and children, the feeble, and the lowly poor, perished by cold and famine in this war.

These themes were again in evidence during the Great Irish Famine of 1845 to 1849 which saw epidemics of typhus, cholera, dysentery and smallpox, as well as ‘mental disease’ which ‘bore its part in the list of calamities, upon which it is our duty to report’ (p.254). ‘The receptions into Lunatic Asylums…greatly increased and the deaths from insanity [became] greater from 1847 to 1850’ as part of ‘that great calamity which befel this country during the years of famine and pestilence’.

The 19th century was also the great asylum-building era in Ireland, when large public institutions were erected for the mentally ill right across the country (Kelly, Reference Kelly2016). The new asylums were immediately overcrowded, fuelling fevered speculation that the rate of mental illness was increasing uncontrollably in Ireland (and elsewhere). It is now clear that Ireland never had an epidemic of mental illness (Brennan, Reference Brennan2014), but, at the time, this panic was slow to subside, fuelled by the ever-expanding institutions, ill-advised mental health legislation and alarmist reports in professional and popular media.

The early 20th century also saw the most dramatic pandemic of recent history, the global influenza pandemic or ‘Spanish flu’ that killed at least 50 million people worldwide between the spring of 1918 and the winter of 1919 (Honigsbaum, Reference Honigsbaum2018). In Ireland, the flu infected almost 800 000 people and more than 20 000 died (Beiner et al. Reference Beiner, Marsh and Milne2009; Milne, Reference Milne2018). The pandemic had enormous effects across Irish society (Milne, Reference Milne2018). The large, overcrowded asylums were hit especially hard: a fifth of all patients in Belfast asylum died of the flu, and one patient in every seven in the asylums in Kilkenny, Castlebar, Maryborough and Armagh fell victim (Robins, Reference Robins1986; Kelly, Reference Kelly2016).

Tuberculosis was another persistent problem in Ireland through much of the 20th century, becoming the leading cause of death in Irish children in the 1930s (Ferry, Reference Ferry2019). It, too, was especially problematic in the mental hospitals (Kelly, Reference Kelly2016). The tuberculosis epidemic did not end until the late 1950s as a result of testing, vaccination and effective antibiotics. The advent of COVID-19 in early 2020 prompted many media comparisons of the new coronavirus virus with not only the Spanish flu and tuberculosis but also HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, severe acute respiratory syndrome in 2003 (SARS, which caused no deaths in Ireland) and the influenza pandemic of 2009 (‘swine flu’, which caused 27 deaths in Ireland) (Bielenberg, Reference Bielenberg2020). Such comparisons are interesting and useful provided they are accompanied by an awareness that the medical, social, political and economic circumstances of each outbreak can be quite different (Peckham, Reference Peckham2020). As a result, each outbreak, epidemic and pandemic is, in many ways, unique.

What can we learn from plagues, pandemics and epidemics in Irish history prior to COVID-19?

A century after the Spanish flu pandemic, COVID-19 emerged in China during the last week of December 2019 (WHO, 2020a). As was the case in 1918, the new virus presents two clear challenges to the world: the illness caused by the virus itself and the anxiety and panic that it triggers around the globe (Cullen et al. Reference Cullen, Gulati and Kelly2020; Kelly, Reference Kelly2020a; Milne, Reference Milne2020). The ubiquity of speculative and false information about COVID-19 presents particular problems to public understanding and rational management of the outbreak (Cookson, Reference Cookson2020; Harford, Reference Harford2020).

This problem is not new. Exaggerations, rumours, myths and falsehoods also abounded during the Spanish flu pandemic, causing confusion, distress and a great deal of panic (Foley, Reference Foley2011). Today, social media are especially prone to such issues (Lanier, Reference Lanier2018). In February 2020, the WHO took specific steps to counter the inaccuracies and conspiracy theories that were spreading in both social and conventional media (Lancet, 2020a; Zarocostas, Reference Zarocostas2020). Various medical journals made reliable information available for healthcare professionals (Lancet, 2020b; Razai et al. Reference Razai, Doerholt, Ladhani and Oakeshott2020). These steps are important. The experience of the Spanish flu clearly demonstrates the power of myths to persist and the urgent requirement for calm, factual information to counteract unhelpful panic.

Another key lesson from the Spanish flu is that pandemics have profound and lasting psychological effects on the population. Milne (Reference Milne2018) writes about the emotional effects of the Spanish flu, exploring the losses that people suffered and the psychological traumas that lasted, in many cases, for a lifetime. It is important to recognise these long-term psychological effects during all phases of the pandemic and to offer psychological interventions to people directly affected by the virus (Duan & Zhu, Reference Duan and Zhu2020).

Regrettably, some of the public health measures designed to control transmission, such as isolation and quarantine, can have negative effects on psychological well-being. While these measures are effective for controlling the spread (Hellewell et al. Reference Hellewell, Abbott, Gimma, Bosse, Jarvis, Russell, Munday, Kucharski, Edmunds, Funk and Eggo2020), strategies such as quarantine are also associated with specific stressors, such as fear of infection, frustration, boredom and problems stemming from inadequate supplies and insufficient information (Brooks et al. Reference Brooks, Webster, Smith, Woodland, Wessely, Greenberg and Rubin2020). After quarantine, there can be concerns about finances and stigma, among other matters. These negative effects can be ameliorated by terminating quarantine as soon as possible, providing adequate information and supplies, reducing boredom and improving communication.

As was the case during the Spanish flu pandemic (Milne, Reference Milne2018), many children’s lives have been deeply disrupted by COVID-19. The problems are particularly acute in children who are largely confined to home owing to school closures, family illness or physical distancing. In this setting, it important that children are guided about online learning, but are not overburdened with work; that parents work with schools to ensure healthy lifestyles and that good diet, personal hygiene and sleep habits are encouraged (Wang et al. Reference Wang, Zhang, Zhao, Zhang and Jiang2020). It can also be useful for parents to have direct conversations with children about the outbreak in order to alleviate their anxieties.

One of the greatest psychological challenges of a prolonged pandemic is learning to live with uncertainty not only about the virus (Vetter et al. Reference Vetter, Eckerle and Kaiser2020) but also about the outbreak’s long-term effect on our societies and our way of life (Harari, Reference Harari2020; Jenkins, Reference Jenkins2020; Mance, Reference Mance2020; Naughton, Reference Naughton2020; Ord, Reference Ord2020). Both the epidemics during the Great Irish Famine and the Spanish flu had profound effects on Irish society (Robins, Reference Robins1995; Foley, Reference Foley2011; Milne, Reference Milne2018). In this context, it is important, in the current pandemic, to find time to reflect on one’s thoughts and emotions about such uncertainty (Chödrön, Reference Chödrön2016; Kelly, Reference Kelly2020a), to care for one’s physical health, giving particular priority to sleep (Walker, Reference Walker2017) and to follow the mental health guidance provided by the WHO (2020c), US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2020) and US Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (2014).

From the perspective of psychiatry, one of the other lessons from the epidemics and pandemics of the past is that not everyone suffers equally: the poor suffered disproportionately during the epidemics of the Great Irish Famine, and people with mental illness were especially vulnerable to the Spanish flu. The reason at that time was that so many of the mentally ill were confined in large, unhygienic mental hospitals through which the flu spread at high speed (Kelly, Reference Kelly2016). Today, mental health care is, for the most part, based in the community, but there is still every reason to believe that people with mental illness are at increased risk.

Even prior to COVID-19, it was known that people with mental illness still have a lower life expectancy and poorer physical health than the general population (Rodgers et al. Reference Rodgers, Dalton, Harden, Street, Parker and Eastwood2018). This places the mentally ill at increased risk in a pandemic, especially for community transmission of the virus. This also underlines the importance of continued multi-disciplinary care during the outbreak, despite the inevitable difficulties involved in delivering such care.

Looking to the future more broadly, there is moderately strong, long-standing evidence that prenatal infection with viruses, such as influenza, might increase the risk of schizophrenia in offspring in later life (Kępińska et al. Reference Kępińska, Iyegbe, Vernon, Yolken, Murray and Pollak2020). This possibility suggests a need for longitudinal follow-up studies of babies born during or soon after the current COVID-19 pandemic, to assess their developmental indices as they grow and their risk of various mental illnesses in later life. More immediately, this line of research emphasises the importance of public health measures to control transmission of COVID-19 in the first place, including rapid testing, isolation of cases and general physical distancing.

All of these measures require broad-based community support in order to be effective. In early March 2020, the WHO Director-General (2020) emphasised the need for ‘solidarity’ in the face of COVID-19. For all of us, and for people with mental illness in particular, this ‘solidarity’ is essential if we are to learn the lessons of the epidemics and pandemics of Irish history and minimise the impact of COVID-19 on physical and mental health today.

Acknowledgements

The author is very grateful to the editor and reviewers for their comments and suggestions.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflicts of interest

Brendan D. Kelly has no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Ethical standards

This paper did not involve human or animal experimentation. The author asserts that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committee on human experimentation with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. The author asserts that ethical approval for the publication of this paper was not required by their local Ethics Committee.

Footnotes

When originally published, this article contained an error in the text. This has now be fixed.

References

Beiner, G, Marsh, P, Milne, I (2009). Greatest killer of the twentieth century: the Great Flu of 1918-19. History Ireland 17, 4043.Google Scholar
Bielenberg, K (2020). ‘Be alert, but don’t be alarmed!’ Irish Independent, 7 March.Google Scholar
Brennan, D (2014). Irish Insanity, 1800–2000. Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group: London and New York.Google Scholar
Brooks, SK, Webster, RK, Smith, LE, Woodland, L, Wessely, S, Greenberg, N, Rubin, GJ (2020). The psychological impact of quarantine and how to reduce it: rapid review of the evidence. Lancet 395, 912920.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Camus, A (1948). The Plague. Hamish Hamilton: London.Google Scholar
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2020). Manage Anxiety & Stress. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Atlanta, GA.Google Scholar
Chödrön, P (2016). When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times. Shambala Publications, Inc.: Boulder, CO.Google Scholar
Coakley, D (2016). William Wilde in the west of Ireland. Irish Journal of Medical Science 185, 277280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cookson, C (2020). Beware fake news, do not panic buy and prepare for possible self-isolation. Financial Times, 7–8 March.Google Scholar
Cullen, W, Gulati, G, Kelly, BD (2020). Mental health in the Covid-19 pandemic. QJM, doi:10.1093/qjmed/hcaa110 [Epub ahead of print].CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Devlin, H, Boseley, S (2020). The essential guide: What do we know? How should we react? Guardian, 7 March.Google Scholar
Donnelly, W, Wilde, WR, Wilkie, H (1856). The Census of Ireland for the Year 1851, Part V: Tables of Deaths. Volume 1. Containing the Report, Tables of Pestilences, and Analysis of the Tables of Deaths. Thom and Sons for Her Majesty’s Stationery Office: Dublin.Google Scholar
Duan, L, Zhu, G (2020). Psychological interventions for people affected by the COVID-19 epidemic. Lancet Psychiatry 7, 300302.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Economist (2020). New world curriculum. Economist, 7 March.Google Scholar
Ferry, G (2019). A woman’s place. Dorothy Stopford Price and the control of tuberculosis in Ireland. Lancet 393, 20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foley, C (2011). The Last Irish Plague: The Great Flu Epidemic in Ireland, 1918–19. Irish Academic Press: Dublin and Portland, OR.Google Scholar
Froggatt, P (1965). The demographic work of Sir William Wilde. Irish Journal of Medical Science 40, 213220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Froggatt, P (2016). The demographic work of Sir William Wilde. Irish Journal of Medical Science 185, 293295.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garcia, MN, Hernandez, D, Gorchakov, R, Murray, KO, Hotez, PJ (2015). The 1899 United States kissing bug epidemic. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 9, e0004117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geary, L (2016). William Wilde: historian. Irish Journal of Medical Science 185, 301302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giuffrida, A (2020). ‘This is so surreal’. Stigma and strain in Italy as EU’s worst outbreak intensifies. Guardian, 7 March.Google Scholar
Harari, YN (2020). The world after coronavirus. Financial Times, 21–22 March.Google Scholar
Harford, T (2020). Falsehoods spread and mutate just like a virus. Financial Times, 7–8 March.Google Scholar
Hellewell, J, Abbott, S, Gimma, A, Bosse, NI, Jarvis, CI, Russell, TW, Munday, JD, Kucharski, AJ, Edmunds, WJ, Centre for the Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases COVID-19 Working Group, Funk, S, Eggo, RM (2020). Feasibility of controlling COVID-19 outbreaks by isolation of cases and contacts. Lancet Global Health 8, e488e496.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Honigsbaum, M (2018). The art of medicine. Spanish influenza redux: revisiting the mother of all pandemics. Lancet 391, 24922495.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honigsbaum, M (2019). The Pandemic Century: One Hundred Years of Panic, Hysteria and Hubris. C. Hurst and Co. (Publishers) Ltd.: London.Google Scholar
Jenkins, S (2020). Let them wash your hands, but not your brain. Guardian, 7 March.Google Scholar
Kelly, BD (2016). Hearing Voices: The History of Psychiatry in Ireland. Irish Academic Press: Dublin.Google Scholar
Kelly, BD (2020a). Coping with Coronavirus. How to Stay Calm and Protect Your Mental Health: A Psychological Toolkit. Merrion Press: Newbridge.Google Scholar
Kelly, BD (2020b). Coronavirus: should we keep calm and carry on? Guardian, 9 March.Google Scholar
Kelly, BD (2020c). Panic and hysteria will only weaken effort to halt virus. Irish Times, 2 March.Google Scholar
Kępińska, AP, Iyegbe, CO, Vernon, AC, Yolken, R, Murray, RM, Pollak, TA (2020). Schizophrenia and influenza at the centenary of the 1918–1919 Spanish influenza pandemic: mechanisms of psychosis risk. Frontiers in Psychiatry 11, 72.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lancet (2020a). COVID-19: fighting panic with information. Lancet 395, 537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancet (2020b). COVID-19: too little, too late? Lancet 395, 755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanier, J (2018). Ten Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media Accounts Right Now. Henry Holt and Company: New York.Google Scholar
Mance, H (2020). A shock to the system. Financial Times, 7–8 March.Google Scholar
Milne, I (2018). Stacking the Coffins: Influenza, War and Revolution in Ireland, 1918–19. Manchester University Press: Manchester.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milne, I (2020). Learning from the past. Irish Examiner, 13 March.Google Scholar
Naughton, J (2020). How a global health crisis turns into a state-run surveillance opportunity. Observer, 8 March.Google Scholar
Ord, T (2020). The importance of worst-case thinking. Guardian, 6 March.Google Scholar
Peckham, R (2020). COVID-19 and the anti-lessons of history. Lancet 395, 850852.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Razai, MS, Doerholt, K, Ladhani, S, Oakeshott, P (2020). Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): a guide for UK GPs. BMJ 368, m800.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robins, J (1986). Fools and Mad: A History of the Insane in Ireland. Institute of Public Administration: Dublin.Google Scholar
Robins, J (1995). The Miasma: Epidemic and Panic in Nineteenth Century Ireland. Institute of Public Administration: Dublin.Google Scholar
Rodgers, M, Dalton, J, Harden, M, Street, A, Parker, G, Eastwood, A (2018). Integrated care to address the physical health needs of people with severe mental illness: a mapping review of the recent evidence on barriers, facilitators and evaluations. International Journal of Integrated Care 18, 9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (2014). Coping With Stress During Infectious Disease Outbreaks. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration: Rockville, MD.Google Scholar
Vetter, P, Eckerle, I, Kaiser, L (2020). Covid-19: a puzzle with many missing pieces. BMJ 368, m627.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Walker, M (2017). Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams. Scribner/Simon & Schuster, Inc.: New York.Google Scholar
Wang, G, Zhang, Y, Zhao, J, Zhang, J, Jiang, F (2020). Mitigate the effects of home confinement on children during the COVID-19 outbreak. Lancet 395, 945947.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wang, V (2020). Most cases of the illness are mild, a study finds. New York Times International Edition, 29 February–1 March.Google Scholar
WHO Director-General (2020). WHO Director-General’s opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19 (5 March 2020). World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
Wilson, TG (1942). Victorian Doctor: Being the Life of Sir William Wilde. Methuen: London.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020a). Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020b). Coronavirus (COVID-19). World Health Organization: Geneva. (https://who.sprinklr.com/) Accessed 10 April 2020.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020c). Mental Health Considerations during COVID-19 Outbreak. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
Xiao, Y, Torok, ME (2020). Taking the right measures to control COVID-19. Lancet Infectious Diseases. doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(20)30152-3 [Epub ahead of print].CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Xu, XW, Wu, XX, Jiang, XG, Xu, KJ, Ying, LJ, Ma, CL, Li, SB, Wang, HY, Zhang, S, Gao, HN, Sheng, JF, Cai, HL, Qiu, YQ, Li, LJ (2020). Clinical findings in a group of patients infected with the 2019 novel coronavirus (SARS-Cov-2) outside of Wuhan, China: retrospective case series. BMJ 368, m606.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yang, X, Yu, Y, Xu, J, Shu, H, Xia, J, Liu, H, Wu, Y, Zhang, L, Yu, Z, Fang, M, Yu, T, Wang, Y, Pan, S, Zou, X, Yuan, S, Shang, Y (2020). Clinical course and outcomes of critically ill patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia in Wuhan, China: a single-centered, retrospective, observational study. Lancet Respiratory Medicine. doi:10.1016/S2213-2600(20)30079-5 [Epub ahead of print].CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zarocostas, J (2020). How to fight an infodemic. Lancet 395, 676.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed