Index to Volume VI. Part 73. July 15,1875 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 87
Page 22
... DEATHS . DR . MACLAGAN , who has long complained of the imperfect and unreliable system of death registra- tion carried out at Hexham , again calls attention in his last report to the lax manner in which investiga- tions into the ...
... DEATHS . DR . MACLAGAN , who has long complained of the imperfect and unreliable system of death registra- tion carried out at Hexham , again calls attention in his last report to the lax manner in which investiga- tions into the ...
Page 24
... death - rate in London during June , as above stated , was 18.7 per 1,000 , it averaged 19.9 in the twenty- seven provincial towns . The 12,976 deaths from all causes in the twenty - eight towns during the four weeks of June included ...
... death - rate in London during June , as above stated , was 18.7 per 1,000 , it averaged 19.9 in the twenty- seven provincial towns . The 12,976 deaths from all causes in the twenty - eight towns during the four weeks of June included ...
Page 25
... deaths registered in the twenty - eight towns during the four weeks of June were not certified , either by medical practitioners or by coro- ners . These uncertified deaths were equal to 2.4 per cent . of the total deaths , and ...
... deaths registered in the twenty - eight towns during the four weeks of June were not certified , either by medical practitioners or by coro- ners . These uncertified deaths were equal to 2.4 per cent . of the total deaths , and ...
Page 28
... deaths , or 2.1 per 1,000 , were registered from the principal zymotic diseases . The zymotic death - rate was lowest in Bradfield , where it was 4 , and in Easthampstead Rural and Abingdon Urban it was only 17 , but in Newbury Urban it ...
... deaths , or 2.1 per 1,000 , were registered from the principal zymotic diseases . The zymotic death - rate was lowest in Bradfield , where it was 4 , and in Easthampstead Rural and Abingdon Urban it was only 17 , but in Newbury Urban it ...
Page 29
... deaths , against an average of 403. Compared with the fatality of previous years , when the disease was particularly prevalent , the deaths in 1882 showed a marked diminution . Thus , during the epidemic of 1878 , 995 deaths were ...
... deaths , against an average of 403. Compared with the fatality of previous years , when the disease was particularly prevalent , the deaths in 1882 showed a marked diminution . Thus , during the epidemic of 1878 , 995 deaths were ...
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Common terms and phrases
annual annum apparatus attention average Birkenhead Birmingham Board and Urban borough building carried cause cent cholera cistern Clerk closets Committee Company condition considerable cost death-rate deaths diarrhoea diphtheria disinfection drainage drains Dublin dwellings enteric fever epidemic erected fatal feet filter Government Board Health Exhibition hospital houses improvement increased infectious disease inspection Inspector of Nuisances labour Local Government Board London matter means measles ment Messrs Metropolitan Metropolitan Board month notification Officer of Health passed penny dinners persons pipes plumbers poor population present Public Health Act question rate of mortality re-appointed Medical Officer recently refuse result Robert Boyle Rural Sanitary Authority Rural Sanitary District Salford SANITARY RECORD scarlet fever sewage sewers showed small-pox soil-pipe Street Surveyor tion twenty-eight towns Urban Sanitary Authority Urban Sanitary District ventilation vice water supply water-closets whooping-cough zymotic diseases
Popular passages
Page 138 - Certainly a man has a right to do what he likes with his own, but then every man who does so must make up his mind to certain little penalties.
Page 205 - For the purposes of this act, 1. any premises in such a state as to be a nuisance or injurious to health; 2.
Page 181 - The art of preserving health; that is, of obtaining the most perfect action of body and mind during as long a period as is consistent with the laws of life. In other words, it aims at rendering growth more perfect, decay less rapid, life more vigorous, death more remote.
Page 22 - Any medical officer of health, inspector of nuisances, or inspector of weights and measures, or any inspector of a market, or any police constable under the direction and at the cost of the looal authority appointing such officer, inspector, or constable, or charged with the execution...
Page 11 - ... by addition or otherwise, so that it, or any part thereof, shall be inadequate or defective in respect to strength, ventilation, light, sewerage, or...
Page 138 - There shall be no more thence an infant of days, nor an old man that hath not filled his days; for the child shall die a hundred years old; but the sinner, being a hundred years old, shall be accursed.
Page 205 - On the written application of any person to a local authority, stating that any drain watercloset earthcloset privy ashpit or cesspool on or belonging to any premises within their district is a nuisance or injurious to health (but not otherwise), the local authority may, by writing, empower their surveyor or inspector of nuisances, after twenty-four hours...
Page 49 - Mr. Hastings introduced a Bill into the House of Commons for the purpose of putting a private medical man into the position of a criminal if he did not become a state official, whenever he came into contact with infectious disease, whether he was willing to be a state official or not. The Bill came on for second reading on June 27th in last year. The House was counted out immediately after Mr. Hastings' speech in its favour, and the Bill was not proceeded with.
Page 206 - ... to cause the said works to be inspected while in progress, and from time to time during their execution to order such reasonable alterations therein, additions thereto, and abandonment of part or parts thereof, as may to the vestry or board or their officers appear, on the fuller knowledge afforded by the opening of the ground, requisite to secure the complete and perfect working of such works...
Page 3 - Board shall, for the purposes of any inquiry directed by the Board, have in relation to witnesses and their examination, the production of papers and accounts, and the inspection of places and matters required to be inspected, similar powers to those which poor law inspectors have under the Acts relating to the relief of the poor for the purposes of those Acts.