Karthik Shashidhar

45%
Flag icon
In 1759, mathematician Daniel Bernoulli decided to try and settle the debate. To work out whether the risk of smallpox infection outweighed the risk from variolation, he developed the first-ever outbreak model. Based on patterns of smallpox transmission, he estimated that variolation would increase life expectancy so long as the risk of death from the procedure was below 10 per cent, which it was.
The Rules of Contagion: Why Things Spread - and Why They Stop
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview