Hints from the Health Department. Leaflet from the archive of the Society of Medical Officers of Health. Credit: Wellcome Collection, London
Report on the health of the Metropolitan Borough of Battersea for the year 1904
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The diseases at present notiliable are:— Small-pox, scarlet
fever, diphtheria and membranous croup, cholera, erysipelas,
typhus, typhoid, continued, relapsing and puerperal fevers.
By an Order of the Local Government Board, 19th September,
1900, bubonic plague was also made notifiable.
On 29th March, 1904, the London County Council made
an Order under section 56, sub-section 6, of the Public Health
(London) Act, 1891, making chicken-pox a notifiable disease
in the County of London for a period of four calendar months.
The Order came into force on 7th April, and was subsequently
renewed, finally expiring on 7th November, 1904.
The number of cases notified during the year was 801,
excluding chicken-pox cases. In East Battersea, 357 cases
were notified; in North-West Battersea, 222 ; in South-West
Battersea, 222.
The number of cases notified and the proportion per 1,000 population are set out as follows :—
Total number of cases notified. | No. of cases notified excluding Chicken-pox. | Notifications per 1,000 of the population excluding Chicken-pox. | |
---|---|---|---|
The Borough | 1,367 | 801 | 4.5 |
East Battersea | 545 | 357 | 4.8 |
North-West Battersea | 427 | 222 | 4.4 |
South-West Battersea | 395 | 222 | 4.2 |
The notifications included 7 cases of small-pox and 566
cases of chicken-pox. No cases of typhus fever, relapsing
fever, cholera, or plague were notified.