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

View report page

Islington 1902

Forty-seventh annual report on the health and sanitary condition of the Borough of Islington

This page requires JavaScript

268
1902]
persons having consumption; and in Yonkers it is a misdemeanour for bakers
or marketmen to pursue their occupation if they suffer from this disease.
So potent a factor is tuberculous dust, all derived from sputum, in the
propagation of Phthisis, that Dr. Bigg, of the New York Board of Health, a
body which has grappled with this disease as no other body in any other
country has hitherto done, has found that adjoining houses tend to become
infected with tuberculosis in so marked a manner as to strongly suggest that
one house becomes infected from another. The cause apparently being that
the infected dust from one house when swept out gains an entrance to its
neighbour, and is liable to infect persons living in it.
In this connection let me state that I have discovered that in Islington,
during the last five years, deaths from Consumption have occurred in 105 pairs
of houses next to each other, that is, in 210 houses; that it has occurred in 7
sets of three houses next to each other, that is, in 21 houses; and that it has
occurred in 2 sets of five houses next to each other, that is, in 10 houses.
The objects attainable by notification are these:—
1.—It will afford an opportunity of instructing the patients and the
householders, especially those living in tenement dwellings and
lodging houses, both orally and by printed matter, as to the
precautions that are esssential to prevent the spread of the
disease, particularly the destruction of the sputum as it is
discharged.
2.—It will afford an opportunity of carrying out such measures of
disinfection as are necessary to remove infective matter both from
the house itself and from the bedding and personal clothing of
the patient.
3.—It will afford an opportunity of inspecting the house and of
discovering whether the rooms are overcrowded or dirty or
insufficiently ventilated.
4. - It will afford an opportunity of maintaining some observation
over consumptive patients, so as to insure that they continue to
take precautionary measures.
5.—It will afford an opportunity of inquiring into the possible source
of the infection.
6.—It will enable information to be gleaned as to the conditions
under which the patient worked, which is a most important