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Disease
was a constant threat during the Industrial Revolution.
Changes in the way that people lived and the conditions
in which they worked led to disease being able to
spread much more rapidly, and new forms of disease
emerged that were as deadly as any killer that had
been before.
Towns
grew very quickly as factories led to migrations from
the countryside and immigration from different parts
of Europe and the empire. As the demand for housing
increased so rapidly the quality of homes constructed
was low. Housing for the worker was cramped in, built
quickly and built with little regard for hygeine.
In many cities the result was that large slums appeared.
These
slums were areas where houses were small, roads narrow
and services such as rubbish collection, sewage works
and basic washing facilities non existant. In this
type of climate bacterias grow quickly, the water
supply is likely to become infected and weaker people
are likely to fall ill much more rapidly.
Water
was often the problem. Factories would dump waste
into streams and rivers. The same streams and rivers
were used to supply homes with water for washing and
cooking. Soon peoples health was endangered. In many
slums the same water supply was infected with human
sewage as toilet facilities were often inadequate
and sometimes consisted of a toilet blcok that was
emptied irregularly: meaning that when it rained,
the waste may overflow into the gutter and therefore
into the rivers and streams.
The
result of this is the spread of disease.
One
of the main killers of the industrial age was Cholera.
This deadly diease was water borne and spread through
filthy cities with ease, killing thousands. Typhoid
also took a hold in some areas and aain made great
use of the poor sewage provisions to take a hold of
many areas.
Diseases
such as Cholera and Typhoid are now fairly easily
prevented. Basic cleanliness, underground sewage pipes
and regularly cleaned and controlled water supplies
doing most of the work to prevent any re-occurence
of this form of disease.
In
an age where the ordinary man had no political say
however, and no money or even education to support
a claim for improved conditions, the issue was often
overlooked. These diseases rarely ouhed the wealthy,
there was always another worker available to replce
those who died, so why should they concern themselves
with issues such as the health of the poor? Thankfully
some of the great industrialists of the time did see
a worth in tackling the problem and there were a number
of reports and recommendations made into preventing
disease and impoving hygeine. The most notable including
the works of Rowntree and Booth. The Industrial age
also saw the advent of new forms of science and medical
advances, these too aided the fight against killers
such as Cholera and Typhoid.
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