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

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Deptford 1914

Annual report on the health of the Metropolitan Borough of Deptford

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73
Upon the recovery or removal of a patient the necessary disinfection
has been carried out, consisting of the stripping and limewashing
of the infected room after fumigation, and of disinfecting the bedding
and infected articles and clothing in the Council's steam disinfector.
Enteric fever, or Typhoid Fever as it is also called, is slowly but
surely succumbing to the measures which have been directed against
it. The part played by shellfish in spreading the infection is becoming
more and more obvious, and new regulations have been made for
controlling the gathering and sale of mussels and other shellfish. The
"carrier" problem is more difficult of solution, as a "carrier" is only
discoverable after a fairly large number of cases have occurred, and
it is sometimes a very difficult matter to deal with a known " carrier."
The situation is this : The carrier of the germs of enteric fever may
be a person who earns his or her living by preparing food for other
people, and although it may have been some years since he or she
had enteric fever, the person is a continual source of danger to the
community, and this danger can only be removed by supplying the
individual with other employment, which will offer no opportunity for
the contamination of food.
The death rate for Deptford was 0•03 per 1,000, whilst for each of
the three preceding years it was 0•02. The case mortality for I914
was 33•3 per cent. compared with 11•8 for 1913.
The rate of mortality for England and Wales was 0•05, for the 97
great towns 0•04, for the 145 smaller towns 0•05, and for the County of
London 0'03.
The cases were distributed in the different wards as follows:—
East 1, North 4, North-West 1, South-East 1, and South-West 2.
Bacteriological examinations were made of 6 specimens of blood,
of which 2 were found to be positive and 4 negative.
The following table gives the situation in the borough of each case
and the general condition of the dwellings:—

ENTERIC FEVER, 1914.

Address.Ward.Age.SexW.C.. accommo-dation.Yard Paving.Sanitary Defects and Remarks
Gosterwood StN.22F.1 externalGoodOne room verminous
DoN.17M.1 „
Ventnor RoadN.W.17M.1 „No nuisance.
Ashmead RoadS.E.32M.1 „
Douglas StreetE.6F.1 „
Waller RoadS.W.56F.1 internal 1 externalSink untrapped, sash lines and walls of W.C. defective.
Besson Streets.w.64F.1 external,,No nuisance.
Etta StreetN.17M.1