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

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St Giles (Camberwell) 1883

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Camberwell]

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212
3. Former experience of Cholera in England
justifies a belief that the presence of imported cases
of the disease at various spots in the country will
not be capable of causing much injury to the population,
if the places receiving the infection have had
the advantage of proper sanitary administration;
and, in order that all local populations may make
their self-defence as effective as they can, it will be
well for them to have regard to the present state of
knowledge concerning the mode in which epidemics
of Cholera (at least in this country) are produced.
4. Cholera in England shows itself so little
contagious, in the sense in which small-pox and
scarlatina are commonly called contagious, that, if
reasonable care be taken where it is present, there
is almost no risk that the disease will spread to
persons who nurse and otherwise closely attend
upon the sick. But Cholera has a certain peculiar
infectiveness of its own, which, where local conditions
assist, can operate with terrible force, and at considerable
distances from the sick. It is characteristic
of Cholera (and as much so of the slight cases
where diarrhoea is the only sympton as of the
disease in its more developed and alarming forms)
that all matters which the patient discharges frovi his
stomach and bowels are infective. Probably, under

" The deaths from Cholera and from Diarrhoea, from the beginning of June until the end of December, in the several groups of districts into which London is divided, were as follows :—

Cholera.Diarrhoea.Total
West (with a population estimated at 511,258)187404591
North ( „ „ „ 686,021)413579992
Central ( „ „ „ 359,219)328390718
East ( „ „ „ 607,945)3,9258614,786
South ( ,, ,, ,, 873,548)7106271,337