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

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Woolwich 1936

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Woolwich]

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102
The less common infectious diseases are admitted to any of the London County
Council's infectious disease hospitals, but it is the practice of the County Council
to select certain of their hospitals for the treatment of such diseases as puerperal
fever, or anterior poliomyelitis, so that special facilities and experience may be
available for such cases.
The total number of notifications, excluding cases of tuberculosis, which are
dealt with later in this Section, was 1,254, compared with 1,363 in 1935.
In tabular form are shown in the next five Tables statistics relating to the
incidence of infectious disease in the Borough in 1936 and previous years.

TABLE No. 39.

Notification of Infectious Diseases (excluding Tuberculosis), 1936.

Diseases.Total Cases Notified.Admissions to Hospital.Total Deaths.
Diphtheria1761757
Scarlet Fever6095814
Puerperal Fever552
Puerperal Pyrexia2322
Enteric Fever (including Para-Typhoid Fever)12111
Erysipelas68302
Malaria22
Dysentery42
Poliomyelitis11
Encephalitis Lethargica114
Smallpox
Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis15156
Ophthalmia Neonatorum268
Zymotic Enteritis635330
Pneumonia249131101
Polio-encephalitis
*Measles (including German Measles)2,06026613
3,3141,303170

* Not notifiable.