2. Asiatic Cholera Flashcards
(32 cards)
Describe 18thc enlightenment. 7
- Individualism
- natural right
- ‘the good state’
- utilitatianism, founded by Jeremy Bentham
- accompanied by growth of states and bureaucratic approaches
- medical police provided order and surveillance
- development of stats
What is utilitarianism? 1
- best moral action leads to best utility
What was the importance of 18th century stats?4
- ‘the science of the state’
- measuring the state
- demography - Thomas Malthus was influential here
- compulsory registration of birth,death and marriage began
Describe 18thC industrialization and urbanisation. 3
- north west textile industry from late 1700-mid 1800s
- shift from small workshops to giant mills
- encourages concentration of workers in mill towns and cities
Describe the industrial city of the 18/19th c. 4
- shock cities
- influx and expansion easily visible.
- inhabitants lived in very close proximity
- inadequate infrastrcutre
What rights and reforms changed in industrial Britain? 4
- Reform act of 1832 changed and rationalised electoral structure and extended franchise
- factory acts of 18333-1834 limited hours for women and children and enforced inspections
- Poor law amendment act/new poor law of 1834 emphasised workhouses and tried to end outdoor relief
- local government changes gave ratepayers power and enabled property legislation
What was the impact of cholera in the 18thc and what were the public attitudes towards it? 8
- Europe and USA saw major 18th epidemics
- 1831-32, 1848-49, 1853-54 and 1866-67
- overall, cholera was not a huge killer - 53K deaths in 48-9, 5% deaths that year and worst year for death toll
- People were terrified
- Asiatic cholera in england had a rapid and visible course
- economic consequences
- little consensus about action
- contagion vs anticontagion
Describe the spread of cholera in 1832 and the use of quarantine. 6
- Similar experiences with yellow fever in 1821 - gibralter
- conflicts of quarantine vs free trade and contagion vs anticontagionism
- 1831 - cholera moving westward across europe and boards of health established
- Arrived in sunderland in late 1831
- early cases described as english cholera, then identified as asiatic/indian cholera
- Quarantine initiated against objections
What disease theories were there surrounding cholera in 1832? 4
- 2 main theories were miasmatic and contagionist
- endpoints of a spectrum
- debate over quarantine/isolation policy
- most drs were contingent-contagionists, meaning they believed a bit of both
Describe miasmatic theory of diease. 3
- Caused by human/animal/plant matter
- Diffused by air and water
- variable disease
Describe contagionist disease theory. 3
- disease develops in body, communicated person-person
- poison could take form of chemical, fungus or virus
- caused specific illness
How did the 1832 cholera outbreak influence public health? 6
- BoH may be non-medical (Liverpool) or mixed medical and non medical (york)
- BoH issued advice to citizens and established hospitals
- cleaned streets
- the public responded to epidemic with days of prayer and rioting
- eg. manchester riots (anatomy act also a factor in this)
- Position of the medical profession changed
Describe the social investigations on cases of disease (1800s) 4
- People horrified, disgusted and fascinated by slums
- question of why epidemics were urban
- can’t be industrial - would put doubt on economic system
- Must be filthy environment, immorality and ignorance
Who was Edwin Chadwick? 5
- 1800-1890
- sanitarian, lawyer, bureaucrat, and parliamentary secretary
- 1842 - report on the sanitary conditions of the working population
- illness was impacting economy, making it a public concern
- urban disease had environmental causes and could be solved with technology and engineering
What was the link between sanitation and public health in the 19thC? 3
- strong smell caused disease
- piped water, sewers and drainage could help
- public somewhat ignored
Who was John Snow (1813-1858)? 6
- active promoter of anaesthesia
- sceptical of miasma, published alternative theory - on the mode of communication of cholera, 1849
- in 1854 epidemic, found cluster of cholera cases around broad street, soho
- believed pump was source and persuaded council to remove handle
- produced map to accompany 2nd edition of book
- often mythologised today
Who was William Farr (1807-1883)? 5
- Medically trained, became a statistician
- believed in zymotic disease
- saw disease as analogous to fermentation
- putrefaction in blood from organic poisons caused by contagion or miasma
- collected evidence about distribution of cholera in 1853 london epidemic, eg. height above thames, air quality
Summarise the following paper:
Pioneer maps of health and disease in England, by e. gilbert, 1958
- john snow, in 1855, produced a map of cholera deaths and found that deaths were people who drank from the broad street pump
- pump handle removed and cases stopped
- dr baker, 1833, drew a similar map based on a leeds cholera epidemic and noted that most cases were in areas of poor sanitation
- shapter, 1832, drew a map very similar to snow, marking individual cases in exeter, along with landmarks eg. burial grounds and druggists
- he wrote on the 1849 epidemic, and claimed the reduced number of deaths was due to better sanitation
- petermann, 1852, released a map of cholera outbreaks that occured in 1831-3 and spotted cholera was never found in mountainous areas, which was common opinion, thought due to bigger population
- This was followed by census map of 51-2, and it was discovered dense population meant more cholera
- birmingham on a hill but still suffered badly
Cholera quarantine and the english preventive system, 1850-1895. A. Hardy, 1993. What was the british approach to quarantine? 1
- as a free trade island, used different methods to quarantine yet successful
Cholera quarantine and the english preventive system, 1850-1895. A. Hardy, 1993. What was the british attitude towards coming epidemics? 4
- could predict them based on course in europe
- better sanitary conditions improved confidence in controlling outbreak
- preventive measures were suggested
- no consensus
Cholera quarantine and the english preventive system, 1850-1895. A. Hardy, 1993. What lessons did britain learn from 1866 in terms of cholera? 3
- the lancet were confident in ability to handle
- cholera arrived by sea from egypt and britain began to take a broad, rather than local, preventative approach
- clean water supplies and shipping regulations began
Cholera quarantine and the english preventive system, 1850-1895. A. Hardy, 1993. What were the port sanitary authorities? 8
- removal of ill people from boat to hospital
- improved sanitary conditions in ports
- boats worked around this so given more powers to disinfect, burn etc
- the rights of mainland local authorities were extended to port medical officers of health
- boats arriving from infected places were tracked and inspected on arrival
- there were fears as europe and the middle east became more connected by trains
- european countries approached cholera differently - france were secretive, belgium were open, holland openish
- the 1885 shipping act based on f.e blaxall’s report imposed stricter conditions and person inspections
Cholera quarantine and the english preventive system, 1850-1895. A. Hardy, 1993. How did britain become free from cholera after 1867 and how confident were the public? 8
- Inspections were excellent and billed as key reason for lack of epidemics, 1892-93
- by 92, cholera was heavily reported on so greater awareness, therefore better response to threat
- fear of fear disruption society rather than actual disease
- authorities took it seriously, public didn’t
- no epidemic due to weather as it came frm hamburg too late and distance from hamburg and antwerp meant symptoms showed by time of arrival
- there was a small outbreak in grimsby due to poor inspection staff, but the wider system was good
- sanitary and hygiene weren’t as important
- luck helped but policies made huge difference
The cholera years. c. rosenberg, 1962. introduce the topoc of cholera in the usa. 4
- during 19thc, public health was still catching up with urbanisation
- reduce in importance of religion between first and last USA epidemics (1832-66) so other treatments became more important
- cities accepted, and leaving the city no longer an option
- more slums and worse conditions developed by second outbreak