Gaëtan Dugas In the early years of the
AIDS epidemic, a
patient zero transmission scenario was compiled by
William Darrow and colleagues at the United States
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Journalist
Randy Shilts subsequently wrote about patient zero, based on Darrow's findings, Dugas was a flight attendant who was sexually promiscuous in several North American cities, according to Shilts' book. He was vilified for several years as a "mass spreader" of HIV, and was seen as the original source of the HIV epidemic among
homosexual men. Four years later, Darrow repudiated the study's methodology and how Shilts had represented its conclusions. A 2007 study by Michael Worobey and Arthur Pitchenik published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America claimed that, based on the results of
genetic analysis, current North American strains of HIV probably moved from
Africa to
Haiti before entering the United States around 1969, probably through a single
immigrant. However, a teenager named
Robert Rayford died in
St. Louis, Missouri, possibly of complications from AIDS in 1969, having most likely become infected with the virus
before 1966. This would imply that there were prior carriers of HIV-strains in North America. The phrase patient zero is now used in the media to refer to the primary case for infectious disease outbreaks, as well as for computer virus outbreaks, and more broadly, as the source of ideas or actions that have far-reaching consequences.
David Heymann, professor of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and formerly with the
World Health Organization (
WHO), has questioned the importance of finding patient zero, stating, "Finding patient zero may be important in some instances, but only if they are still alive and spreading the disease; and more often than not, especially in large disease outbreaks, they're not."
Others •
Mary Mallon ("Typhoid Mary") was an index case of a
typhoid outbreak in the early 1900s. An apparently healthy carrier, she infected at least 47 people while working as a
cook. She eventually was isolated to prevent her from spreading the disease to others. • The first recorded victim of
Ebola was a 44-year-old schoolteacher named Mabalo Lokela, who died on 8 September 1976, 14 days after symptom onset. • 64-year-old
Liu Jianlun, a
Guangdong doctor, transmitted
SARS internationally by infecting other
super-spreaders during a stay in the
Hong Kong Metropole Hotel in 2003. • A baby in the Lewis House at 40 Broad Street, named Frances Lewis, is considered the index patient in the
1854 cholera outbreak in
London, England. • Édgar Enrique Hernández may be patient zero of the
2009 flu pandemic. He recovered, and a bronze statue has been erected in his honor. Maria Adela Gutierrez, who contracted the virus about the same time as Hernández, became the first officially confirmed fatality. • One-year-old
Emile Ouamouno is believed to be patient zero in the 2014 Ebola epidemic in
Guinea and West Africa. • 51-year-old Jesus Lujan was the index case of the
1924 Los Angeles pneumonic plague outbreak which killed 33. • There are many known "patient zeros" across the world for the
COVID-19 pandemic, known for different symptoms and stories. Out of Los Angeles, patient zero Gregg Garfield spent 64 days in the hospital, including 30 days of coma-state after contracting the virus on a ski trip. Doctors said he had a 1% chance to live. He survived, but had fingers and toes amputated. • Another patient zero of the COVID-19 pandemic includes an elderly man who was diagnosed on 1 December 2019, someone who had no contact with the
Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market. Three other people experienced symptoms in the following days who also did not have contact with the Market. ==Non-medical usage==