London's Pulse: Medical Officer of Health reports 1848-1972

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St Pancras 1933

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for St. Pancras, Metropolitan Borough]

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( c)Milk and Dairies Order, 1926.

Address where offence committed.Offence.Date of Hearing of Summons.Result of Proceedings.
1933.
Elm RoadDelivering milk in bottles which were not filled or closed on registered premisesAug. 4thFined £1.
Hadley StreetCarrying on trade of a dairyman without being registeredNov. 29thDismissed on payment of costs, £2 2s.

Wholesale Dealers in Margarine.—No certificates of registration under the provisions
of the Food and Drugs (Adulteration) Act were issued during the year.
Section VI.—PREVALENCE OF, AND CONTROL OVER, NOTIFIABLE DISEASES.
The undermentioned diseases are compulsorily notifiable in St. Pancras:-
A. Under the Public Health (London) Act, 1891:-
Small-pox (Variola) Typhus Fever
Cholera Typhoid „
Diphtheria and Membranous Croup Enteric „
Erysipelas Relapsing ,,
Scarlet Fever (Scarlatina) Continued „
Puerperal „
B. Under Special Regulations made by the Ministry of Health granted
under powers contained in the Public Health Acts:-
Plague (1900)
Cerebro-spinal Fever and Acute Poliomyelitis (1912)
Acute Encephalitis Lethargica and Acute Polio-encephalitis (1919)
Puerperal Fever and Puerperal Pyrexia (1926, 1928)
Ophthalmia Neonatorum (1926, 1928)
Tuberculosis (1930);
and the Infectious Diseases (London) Regulations, 1927, for
Malaria Dysentery
Acute Primary Pneumonia Acute Influenzal Pneumonia;
and wherein Enteric Fever is defined to include the
Paratyphoid group of Fevers
C. Under a Special Local Order of the Ministry of Health in 1920:-
Measles German Measles
D. Under a Special Order of the London County Council in 1909:-
Glanders Anthrax
Hydrophobia . "when these occur in man."
E. Under the London County Council (General Powers) Act, 1932:-
Food Poisoning.