AUTHOR COPY Original Article SARS, pandemic inuenza and Ebola: The disease control styles of Britain and the United States Charles Allan McCoy Department of Sociology, State University of New York, College at Plattsburgh, 101 Broad St, Plattsburgh, NY 12901, USA. E-mail: cmcco011@plattsburgh.edu Abstract Some researchers claim that nation states have begun to conform to an internationally uniform response to infectious disease. A potential barrier to this development are the distinct systems of disease control that industrialized nation states have developed over long periods of time. I explain the divergent public policy responses of the United Kingdom and the United States to SARS, pandemic inuenza and Ebola by taking a historical approach. I examine the different medical theories of disease that existed in Britain and America in the nineteenth century as each country began to develop its public health system. I also examine where in the state apparatus disease control was located in each country. In Britain disease control was historically part of the welfare sector of the state, while in the United States it was originally operated by the military. These different starting conditions helped push Britain and the United States along different paths of disease control and this helps explain why they respond to contemporary diseases in such different ways. The historical durabilitynational styles of disease may make it more difcult for the international community to enact a truly uniform response to pandemics. Social Theory & Health advance online publication, 27 May 2015; doi:10.1057/sth.2015.9 Keywords: disease control; SARS; pandemic inuenza; Ebola; public policy; path dependency Introduction The rst decade of the twenty-rst century has seen the return of the threat of pandemic disease. In the last 15 years, the world has experienced outbreaks of SARS, avian uand swine uand last year the saw the start of the largest outbreak of Ebola ever recorded; the outbreak has so far claimed over 10 000 lives and infected over 24 000 people. © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 1477-8211 Social Theory & Health 117 www.palgrave-journals.com/sth/