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

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Southwark 1934

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Southwark, Borough of]

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10
DEATHS.
1,634 deaths were registered in the sub-districts of the Borough
during 1934.
28 Southwark residents died in the street, or on the way to hospital.
1,033 deaths occurred in Public Assistance Institutions, the various
hospitals, and other public places for the treatment of the sick found
within our boundaries. These deaths in institutions comprised 321
belonging to Southwark and 712 to other sanitary districts.
The number of inhabitants belonging to the Borough dying away
from home—that is, outside our boundaries in the various hospitals and
infirmaries—was 1,238.
When the 712 deaths of those persons who were non-parishioners,
but who died in our Borough, have been deducted, and the 1,238 "outlying''
deaths added, the actual or ''corrected'' number of deaths
belonging to the sanitary area is found to be 2,160, of which number
1,160 were males and 1,000 females.
The death-rate, when calculated on this "corrected" number, is
13.5 per 1,000 inhabitants for the whole Borough for the year 1934, as
against a rate of 13.9 for 1933.
The percentage of persons dying away from Southwark in relation
to the total number of deaths belonging to the Borough was 57.3.

The principal localities in which the "outlying" deaths occurred are as follows:—

Lambeth Hospital325
St. Giles' Hospital205
Rotherhithe Hospital138
East Dulwich Hospital71
St. Thomas's Hospital51
King's College Hospital7
Belgrave Hospital6
Royal Waterloo Hospital17
General Lying-in Hospital14
Mental Hospitals85
In the Street and other Institutions319
1,238