Disease and death - How it was handled in History-echoes of today
Interesting read:
We can listen to scientists and spend money to save lives, or we can watch our neighbors die.
"They (New York City administrators) dug sewers to pipe filth into the Hudson and East Rivers instead of letting it pool in the streets. In 1842, they built the Croton Aqueduct to carry fresh water to Manhattan. In 1910, they chlorinated its water to kill more germs. In 1912, they began requiring dairies to heat their milk because a Frenchman named Louis Pasteur had shown that doing so spared children from tuberculosis. Over time, they made smallpox vaccination mandatory.
Libertarians battled almost every step. Some fought sewers and water mains being dug through their properties, arguing that they owned perfectly good wells and cesspools. Some refused smallpox vaccines until the Supreme Court put an end to that in 1905, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts.
In the Spanish flu epidemic of 1918, many New Yorkers donned masks but 4,000 San Franciscans formed an Anti-Mask League. (The citys mayor, James Rolph, was fined $50 for flouting his own health departments mask order.) Slowly, science prevailed, and death rates went down."
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/15/sunday-review/coronavirus-history-pandemics.html