The word 'epidemic' belongs to the same Greek root family as 'pandemic' and 'endemic,' all built on 'dêmos' (δῆμος, the people). Where 'pandemic' means 'of all the people' and 'endemic' means 'in the people,' 'epidemic' means 'upon the people' — from 'epí' (ἐπί, upon, on, among) + 'dêmos.' The image is of a disease that descends upon a community from outside, like a visitor arriving.
This image of disease-as-visitor is not accidental. The Greek noun 'epidēmía' (ἐπιδημία) originally had nothing to do with sickness. Its primary meaning was 'a stay in a place, a sojourn, a visit' — literally, 'being among the people.' The related verb 'epidēméō' (ἐπιδημέω) meant 'to stay in a place, to be at home, to be present' — the opposite of 'apodēméō' (to be away from home, to travel abroad). An 'epidēmía' was simply the state of being present in the community.
The medical appropriation of this word was the work of Hippocrates of Cos (c. 460–370 BCE), the foundational figure of Western medicine. His treatise titled 'Epidēmíai' — conventionally translated as 'Epidemics' — is a collection of clinical observations organized by location and season. Hippocrates documented the diseases that 'visited' particular cities in particular years, noting their symptoms, progression, and outcomes. For Hippocrates, disease patterns were governed by environmental factors — climate, wind direction
The word passed through Late Latin 'epidēmia' and entered the European vernaculars during the great plague outbreaks of the medieval and early modern periods. The French 'épidémie' appeared in the sixteenth century; English 'epidemic' followed in the early seventeenth. The first recorded English use dates to 1603, the year of a devastating plague outbreak in London that killed some 30,000 people.
The distinction between 'epidemic' and 'pandemic' crystallized gradually. Both describe the unusual prevalence of a disease, but 'epidemic' typically refers to a regional or national outbreak, while 'pandemic' describes a global or multi-continental one. 'Endemic,' by contrast, describes a disease that is constantly present in a population at baseline levels — malaria is endemic in parts of sub-Saharan Africa; the common cold is endemic everywhere. The three terms form a spectrum of geographic scale and temporal pattern.
The derivative 'epidemiology' — the study of how diseases spread through populations — appeared in the nineteenth century and became a formal discipline. John Snow's investigation of the 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak in London is often cited as the founding moment of modern epidemiology. Snow mapped cholera cases and traced them to a single contaminated water pump, demonstrating that the disease spread through water rather than air — a triumph of epidemiological reasoning.
The figurative use of 'epidemic' — 'an epidemic of gun violence,' 'an epidemic of loneliness' — dates from the eighteenth century and reflects the word's power as a metaphor. Anything that spreads rapidly and harmfully through a population can be called an epidemic, extending the medical vocabulary of disease into social, psychological, and political domains.