The Historical Evolution of Some Intrinsic Dimensions of Quarantine
Authors
Andrea Conti
Department of Medical Surgical Critical Area, University of Florence Don Carlo Gnocchi Foundation, IRCCS Florence Italian Center for Evidence-Based Medicine, Florence
Gian Franco Gensini
Department of Medical Surgical Critical Area, University of Florence Don Carlo Gnocchi Foundation, IRCCS Florence Italian Center for Evidence-Based Medicine, Florence
Keywords:
Quarantine , History of medicine, Health care , Epistemology
Abstract
The word “Quarantine” makes its first recorded appearance in the English language in the seventeenth century. It was originally a thirty-toforty day period in which subjects suspected of carrying a contagious disease were subjected to detention and segregation with selective restraint regulations regarding circulation. Five dimensions are implicit in this original use of the term: “time”, “disease”, “context”, “restraint” and “segregation”. These dimensions have undergone modification through time, and more recently the term has come to indicate a more variable time period, adopted with reference to the compulsory physical separation not only of groups of human beings potentially exposed to contagious disease, but also of animals, goods and various means of transportation. Currently, “new” pathologies such as SARS and avian influenza must also be considered, and the context dimension has become much more various than in the past, while the restraint dimension is now connected with personal liberty and autonomy and not only with medicalhealth risks. Finally, the original palliative, rather than curative, segregation dimension has left space to specialised therapeutic quarantine units, in this way completing the medical and figurative evolution of the concept of quarantine through time.