
E22: DDT and Silent Spring: Fifty years after
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"DDT and Silent Spring: Fifty years after" by Cristobal S. Berry-Caban provides an in-depth review of DDT's historical impact, focusing on its development, widespread use, and subsequent controversy. It outlines Paul Hermann Müller's discovery of DDT's insecticidal properties and its crucial role in controlling diseases like typhus and malaria during World War II and beyond, leading to significant reductions in cases globally. The text then transitions to discussing Rachel Carson's pivotal book, Silent Spring, which brought worldwide attention to the detrimental environmental effects of DDT, including its impact on wildlife and its entry into the food chain. It emphasizes Carson's arguments against indiscriminate agricultural use, highlighting ecosystem disruption, potential human health concerns, and the evolution of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes, ultimately leading to a shift in public and governmental perception of pesticides.
You can read the original article here: https://jmvh.org/article/ddt-and-silent-spring-fifty-years-after/