Measles and the (sometimes unnatural) history of outbreaks

MOD2153.04
Course System Home Terms Spring 2015 Measles and the (sometimes unnatural) history of outbreaks

Course Description

Summary

We will use the recent measles outbreak in the United States as a lens into the history and also (murky) future of infectious disease outbreaks in our human race. We'll cover outbreaks and outbreak dynamics, along with foundational topics in microbiology, immunology, and infectious disease. We’ll also situate the current measles outbreak in the context of the ongoing conversation about vaccination, autism, and the complicated search for truth in the age of easy information. This course requires no specific scientific knowledge, however a rudimentary understanding of biology is helpful.

Prerequisites

None.

Please contact the faculty member :

Instructor

  • Zeke Bernstein

Day and Time

Academic Term

Spring 2015

Credits

1

Course Level

2000

Maximum Enrollment

18