It’s rare because we have higher hygiene standards. Basically washing our hands eliminated the black plague.
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eatCasserole@lemmy.world 12 hours agoIt actually still exists in people too, it’s just rare and treatable.
13igTyme@piefed.social 12 hours ago
LurkingLuddite@piefed.social 11 hours ago
More like fleas and other biting insects are more rare, and people generally do not tolerate sleeping around non-pet rats. It’s more living conditions than hygene.
homes@piefed.world 11 hours ago
Basically washing our hands eliminated the black plague.
That’s not how it was spread. It was spread by fleas and other blood to blood contact if the person had to bubonic plague and, in later stages, through the air in close contact via infectious respiratory droplets if the person had the pneumonic plague.
13igTyme@piefed.social 11 hours ago
My comment was an over simplification. By having higher hygiene standards we reduced our contact with rats and other things that can carry it. It is essentially “We did A, which caused B through G, which lead to less of H.”
homes@piefed.world 11 hours ago
Your comment was partially incorrect. I corrected you. Washing hands had little to nothing to do with it. You didn’t mention anything about rats or the fleas they carried, which were the primary carrier of the bubonic plague
DarkCloud@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
Got a rodent problem? Just wash your hands!
smh@slrpnk.net 9 hours ago
Sure would have been nice to know this when my house got invested with fleas. No need to flea bomb, I just needed to wash my hands!
(got a pup from a household with inadequate flea control measures–they’d give him a flea bath weekly, but never treated the environment or their cats. They swore up and down he didn’t have fleas.)
DarkCloud@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
In all seriousness I’ve found to treat cats for fleas the best method is a flea comb and a tub of bubbly soapy water.
The cat doesn’t go in the water, instead you sit the cat on your lap, comb it’s fur gently with the flea comb, and when you spot a flea on the comb, you dunk it in the bubbly soapy water.
…the bubbles catch the flea, and make it a lot harder for them to escape. Turns a traumatic soggy moggy time, into a nice combing kill session.
But I take it you just have the pup, so this tips might be for a passer by.
ordnance_qf_17_pounder@reddthat.com 11 hours ago
Plague: Then vs now
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