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729857
History- Extension study- Public Health
Description
GCSE History (Medicine and Treatment) Mind Map on History- Extension study- Public Health, created by emmajanelloyd on 07/04/2014.
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history
medicine and treatment
history
medicine and treatment
gcse
Mind Map by
emmajanelloyd
, updated more than 1 year ago
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emmajanelloyd
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Resource summary
History- Extension study- Public Health
Problems 1350-1750
Towns and cities getting bigger
Growing population increased problems
Rubbish, dead animals and human and animal excrement dumped and left on streets
Polluted rivers/drinking water: people drank ale instead
Poor sanitation
Sewage contaminated water
Infectious disease
Frequent outbreaks and epidemics
Deadly
Poor public health provision
Local authorities attempt to deal with outbreaks
Fail due to lack of understanding
1665 Plague in London
Theatres closed
Large funerals banned to stop crowds
Dogs and cats were killed
Barrels of tar were burned in the streets
Carts collected the dead who were buried in deep mass graves
Household boarded into its home for 28 days if one member caught the plague
Days of fasting and prayers were ordered
Toilet sanitation
Only richer people had privies- padded seats over a bucket for their own family's to use
Poorer people had to share- several families used one cesspit which had a wooden seat above
Chamber pots inside houses- emptied in drains or thrown out the window
People paid nightsoil workers or 'going farmers' to empty cesspits
Contents sold to farmers as manure
1596: John Harrington invented a WC
Ridiculed so didn't develop properly for another 200 years
Action 1350-1900
Links between dirt and disease
By-laws to keep streets clean
By-laws to stop people dumping things in rivers
Success into piping water into towns and cities
Some towns had public toilets and baths
Water in London
1602 artificial river from the River Lee began construction
Edmund Colthurst (private investor)
Money ran out after just two miles
1609 Hugh Myddleton tried again-paid half the bills
The rest funded by King James I
Project finished in 1613
1750 most water supplied by private companies
Piped direct to homes or to sandpiper on street corners
Link between dirt and disease wasn't proven until 1861
People believed God caused disease
So didn't want taxes to be spent on health provision
Laissez-faire government attitude
Changes in government role after 1750
Gin made more expensive
Improved health among the poor who were drinking lots of cheap gin
Improved the economy (drunk people didn't work so hard)
Made small pox vaccination compulsory in 1853
1871 all vaccinations were registered
Death rate of small pox declined
Industrial diseases
Urban diseases
Industrial revolution: 18th-19th century
Huge growth in towns
People moved to find work in factories
Low wages
Several families shared low quality housing
No laws to provide sewers, fresh water or to remove rubbish
Infectious diseases spread more rapidly
1831: Cholera epidemic put pressure on authorities to take action
First outbreak of Cholera in Britain killed thousands in just a few weeks
Edwin Chadwick
The Sanitary Conditions of the Labouring Population
Unsanitary and overcrowded conditions
Cost of work houses is high
Improved living conditions will reduce admissions to work houses and save money in the long run
Work received lots of attention and some criticism
Did a survey of the living conditions of working class areas
Work out how to reduce taxes
Government Action
Public Health Act, 1848
Local health boards
1/3 of towns set up a board of health
Appoint medical officers
Fewer than 1/3 appointed medical officers
Organise the removal of rubbish
Build sewer systems
Allowed but did not force town councils to...
Act was temporary and the General Board of health was abolished by 1858
John Snow
Doctor and surgeon
Theory that Cholera was spread through water, not 'bad air'
London's 'Great Stink' (1858) meant a new and expensive sewer system was built
1867, Working class men got the vote and wantd politicians to take action
Central government passed laws and local authorities funded and carried out changes that meant by 1875 local councils had to ensure that...
Clean water was provided
Streets were paved
Rubbish was collected
Sewers were built
Slum housing was demolished
Food in shops was of good quality
Public health since 1900
1905: Liberal government took action in response to worrying health trends
Charles Brooks and Seebohm Rowntree's survey showed struggle of working classes to afford decent food and housing
1/3 of Boer War volunteers did not pass army health tests
Nearly 90% failed tests in slum areas of northern cities
Reforms were difficult and expensive to pass and many people objected to the increasing role of the government in people's lives
WW2 made people aware of importance of governments involvement in health care
1948: NHS set up by Minister Aneurin Bevan
Since 1948 government have taken more action to prevent people getting ill
Funding vaccinations
Better disposal of rubbish and sewage
Laws reducing air pollution
Laws improving health and safety at work
Environmental health officers inspecting food outlets
Health education
Laws banning advertising of tobacco products and smoking in public places
High tax on cigarettes
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