scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

On the Mode of Communication of Cholera

John Snow
TLDR
It would occupy a long time to give an account of the progress of cholera over different parts of the world, with the devastation it has caused in some places, whilst it has passed lightly over others, or left them untouched; and unless this account could be accompanied with a description of the physical condition of the places, and the habits of the people, which I am unable to give, it would be of little use.
Abstract
It would occupy a long time to give an account of the progress of cholera over different parts of the world, with the devastation it has caused in some places, whilst it has passed lightly over others, or left them untouched; and unless this account could be accompanied with a description of the physical condition of the places, and the habits of the people, which I am unable to give, it would be of little use. There are certain circumstances, however, connected with the progress of cholera, which may be stated in a general way. It travels along the great tracks of human intercourse, never going faster than people travel, and generally much more slowly. In extending to a fresh island or continent, it always appears first at a sea-port. It never attacks the crews of ships going from a country free from cholera to one where the disease is prevailing, till they have entered a port, or had intercourse with the shore. Its exact progress from town to town cannot always be traced; but it has never appeared except where there has been ample opportunity for it to be conveyed by human intercourse. There are also innumerable instances which prove the communication of cholera, by individual cases of the disease, in the most convincing manner. Instances such as the following seem free from every source of fallacy. I called lately to inquire respecting the death of Mrs. Gore, the wife of a labourer, from cholera, at New Leigham Road, Streatham. I found that a son of deceased had been living and working at Chelsea. He came home ill with a bowel complaint, of which he died in a day or two. His death took place on August 18th. His mother, who attended on him, was taken ill on the next day, and died the day following (August 20th). There were no other deaths from cholera registered in any of the metropolitan districts, down to the 26th August, within two or three miles of the above place; the nearest being

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning by design: lessons from a baseline study in the NAMWASH Small Towns Programme, Mozambique

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the design and application of a baseline study for a comprehensive water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) intervention in Mozambique, and investigate the relationships among key parameters of interest both for comparison to post-implementation data and to contribute to planning the WASH intervention itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epicasting: An Ensemble Wavelet Neural Network (EWNet) for Forecasting Epidemics

TL;DR: A ensemble wavelet neural network model called EWNet is introduced for forecasting epidemics using a maximal overlap discrete wavelet transform (MODWT) based autoregressive neural network and Experimental results show that the proposedEWNet is highly competitive compared to the state-of-the-art epidemic forecasting methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revealing the Causes of Chronic Disease Epidemics: From Research to Prevention

Ernst L. Wynder
- 01 Feb 1994 - 
TL;DR: The challenge of applied epidemiology and preventive medicine is to improve health-related behaviours beginning with children's health education, extending to economic incentives for adult populations for good health behaviour, and engaging responsible industry, media and governmental influences to manufacture and promote safer products.
Journal Article

The making of an epidemiologist: John Snow before the episode of the Broad Street pump.

TL;DR: This book is the result of his further research into Snow’s early life, incidentally correcting several of the inaccuracies recorded b y S n o w ’s f i r s t b i o g r a p h e r, Richardson3, and perpetuated or compounded since Richardson in other accounts of Snow.
Journal ArticleDOI

Questions on causality and responsibility arising from an outbreak of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections in Norway

TL;DR: It is concluded that many factors contributed to causing the outbreak, but that contamination of a medical device in the production facility was the major necessary condition and contributed primarily to the size of the outbreak.