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

View report page

St Pancras 1911

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

This page requires JavaScript

17
CAUSES OF DEATH.
Notifiable Infectious Diseases.
Small-pox.
Scarlatina or Scarlet Fever.
Diphtheria or Membranous Croup.
Typhus Fever.
Typhoid or Enteric Fever.
Continued Fever.
Relapsing Fever.
Puerperal Fever.
Cholera.
Erysipelas.
Plague.
Chicken-pox.
Cerebros Spinal Meningitis.
Polio-Myelitis.
Principal Zymotic Diseases.
Small-pox.
Scarlet Fever.
Diphtheria.
Typhus Fever.
Enteric Fever.
Continued Fever.
Measles.
Whooping Cough.
Diarrhoea.
Dysentery.
At the end of the Report, in Table 7 c, will be found set out the number of
deaths, under 5 years of age and 5 years upwards from each of the notifiable
infectious diseases in the respective Registration Sub-Districts and the entire
District of St. Pancras. In Table 8, in a similar manner, the deaths from the
non-notifiable " principal zymotic diseases" will be found set out. From these
two Tables the mortality of the respective diseases and of each of the groups
have been obtained, as shown in Tables Nos. 9a and 9b and Tables Nos. 10a
and 10 b, and are compared as follows :—

Phthisis.—This disease, the type of the tubercular group of diseases, was the cause of 330 deaths, compared to 297 deaths in 1910, 374 in 1909, and 362 in the year previous to that. The incidence of this disease in the Sub-Districts was as follows : —

Sub-Districts.Number.Per 1000 Population.Per cent. of Total deaths.
West1041.6811.3
South831.4911.9
East751.258.2
North681.148.1
St. Pancras3.301.399.8
London60841.358.9