A History of Epidemics in Britain, Volume 2 (of 2) by Charles Creighton
1783. March and April. Great epidemic: maximum number of cases in the
7 words | Chapter 70
infirmary with measles 94, on March 22nd.
Chapters
1. Chapter 1
2. CHAPTER I.
3. CHAPTER II.
4. CHAPTER III.
5. CHAPTER IV.
6. CHAPTER V.
7. CHAPTER VI.
8. CHAPTER VII.
9. CHAPTER VIII.
10. CHAPTER IX.
11. CHAPTER I.
12. 1670. From 1673 to 1676, the constitution was a comatose fever, which
13. 1675. In 1678 the “intermittent” constitution returned, having been absent
14. 1709. The following shows the rise of the price of the quarter of wheat in
15. 600. The infection was virulent during the winter, when Portsmouth was
16. 1754. This outbreak was only one of a series; but as it attacked a
17. 1755. He had the weekly bills of mortality before him, and he makes
18. chapter II.) are not without value, as showing that the “putrid” or
19. 87. It passed as one of the healthiest cities in the kingdom, being far
20. 1795. This epidemic must have been somewhat special to Ashton, for it
21. 1828. It was a somewhat close repetition of the epidemic of 1817-19,
22. 619. In all England, the last quarter of 1846 was also most unhealthy, its
23. 1882. The registration district had only 95 deaths from enteric fever
24. CHAPTER II.
25. 1655. There were twenty-seven victuallers or other ships riding in Dundalk
26. 1818. It was in great part typhus, but towards the end of the epidemic,
27. 1835. It will appear from the following (by Geary) that it was largely an
28. 1849. After the subsidence of the great epidemic of relapsing and typhus
29. CHAPTER III.
30. 1782. It is possible that our own recent experience of a succession of
31. 1551. There were certainly two seasons of these agues, 1557 and 1558, the
32. 1675. The prevailing intermittent fevers, he says, gave place to a new
33. 1686. Sydenham records nothing beyond that date, having shortly after
34. 1775. The latter, however, was a summer epidemic, and was naturally less
35. 1762. On the other hand the epidemics of autumn, winter or spring in 1729,
36. 1782. In the London bills the weekly deaths rose in March, to an average
37. 3. After being general, did it occur for some time in single
38. 5. If so, is it likely that clothes or fomites conveyed it in any
39. 1837. The London bills of mortality compiled by the Parish Clerks’ Company
40. 1733. There is nothing to note between Boyle and Arbuthnot; for Willis
41. 1647. First catarrh mentioned in American annals, in the same year
42. 1655. Influenza in America, in the same year with violent earthquakes
43. 1675. Influenza in Europe while Etna was still in a state of
44. 1688. Influenza in Europe in the same year with an eruption of
45. 1693. Influenza in Europe in the same year with an eruption in Iceland
46. 1688. The greatest of them all, that of Smyrna, on the 10th of July, was a
47. CHAPTER IV.
48. 2. If the patient be sprung from a stock in which smallpox is wont to
49. 3. If the attack fall in the flower of life, when the spirits are
50. 4. If the patient be harassed by fever, or by sorrow, love or any
51. 5. If the patient be given to spirituous liquors, vehement exercise or
52. 6. If the attack come upon women during certain states of health
53. 8. If the heating regimen had been carried to excess, or other
54. 9. If the patient had met a chill at the outset, checking the
55. 11. If the attack happen during a variolous epidemic constitution of
56. 14. If the patient be apprehensive as to the result.
57. 1. Whether the distemper given by inoculation be an effectual security to
58. 2. Whether the hazard of inoculation be considerably less than that of the
59. 1200. In 1754 Middleton had done 800 inoculations, with one death. The
60. 1725. Forty-three died, “mostly of the smallpox.”
61. 1766. The annals kept by Sims of Tyrone overlap those of Rutty by a few
62. introduction of vaccination are still every year inoculated with the
63. introduction into the system;” and this he had been doing in the name of
64. CHAPTER V.
65. 1763. Before the date of the Infirmary Book, Watson records an
66. 1766. May to July. Many entries in the book; Watson says:
67. 1768. Great epidemic, May to July; one hundred and twelve in the
68. 1773. Nov. and Dec. Great epidemic: maximum of 130 cases of measles in
69. 1774. May. A slight outbreak (8 cases at one time).
70. 1783. March and April. Great epidemic: maximum number of cases in the
71. 1786. March and April. Maximum on April 5th--measles 47, recovering
72. 1802. 8 had measles, one died.
73. CHAPTER VI.
74. CHAPTER VII.
75. 1802. It ceased in summer, but returned at intervals during the years
76. introduction of the eruption of scarlatina into his description”--as if
77. CHAPTER VIII.
78. 1665. As Sydenham and Willis have left good accounts of the London
79. CHAPTER IX.
80. 1831. Two medical men were at the same time commissioned by the Government
81. 1832. But in June there was a revival, and thereafter a steady increase to
82. 1533. During the same time Gateshead with a population of 26,000, had 433
83. 1306. As in 1832, the infection appeared to die out in the late spring and
84. 849. The Irish papers in the second period are by T. W. Grimshaw, _Dub.
85. 1710. Engl. transl. of the latter, Lond. 1737.
86. 72. The contention of the inspector was that the water-supply had been
87. 113. Sir W. Cecil writing from Westminster to Sir T. Smith on 29th
88. 437. Heberden’s paper was read at the College, Aug. 11, 1767.
89. 1775. October weekly average 323 births 345 deaths
90. 1852. This has been reprinted and brought down to date by Dr Symes
91. 117. This writer’s object is to show that Liverpool escaped most of the
92. 1783. The influenza also began to appear again; and those who had coughs
93. 1786. In the middle of this season the influenza returned, and colds and
94. 1791. Influenza very bad, especially in London.
95. 1808. If it were possible, from authentic documents to compare the history
96. 142. In one of his cases Willis was at first uncertain as to the
97. 141. In those cases there was no inoculation by puncture or otherwise.
98. 1776. _An Introduction to the Plan of the Inoculation Dispensary._ 1778.
99. 5136. Price, _Revers. Payments_. 4th ed. I. 353.
100. 1799. In a subsequent letter (_Med. Phys. Journ._ V., Dec. 1800), he thus
101. 1809. The _Edin. Med. and Surg. Journal_ (VI. 231), in a long review of
102. 25. Read 1 July, 1794.
103. 1689. Engl. Transl. by Cockburn, 1693, p. 39.
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