3.2- How effective were government and individual Inititiaves at Improving Public Health, C1780-1939 Flashcards
What is an initiative?
To put forward an idea/ proposal to improve something (government usually introduce)
Who was Joseph Chamberlain?
1836-1914
Radical social reformer
Embarked on a massive slum clearance programme in Birmingham, built housing for the poor, set up free public libraries, art galleries, took gas, water and sewerage systems into control of the city council
Little regard for aristocracy believing they should pay for their privileges
1895 became colonial secretary in Salisbury’s conservative- unionist government where he supported expansion in Africa
MP for Birmingham in 1876
What government initiative was set up for local government action? Successes and failures?
Local government was more prominent in dealing with public health than national government in the 19th C
✅Local authorities could pass their own public acts of parliament to improve public health-London issued 300 such laws
✅Liverpool, Leeds and Manchester also good examples
❌Town improvement committees were seen as corrupt- oligarchies and vested interests
MORE DETAIL IN NOTES
What housing initiative was set up? What was it successes and failures?
A connection had been made in the early 19th C between poor housing and disease
Lack of sanitation was a problem in most houses
✅Some twins and cities had introduced Acts about the quality of housing eg: Leeds and Liverpool
✅Public health Act of 1875 was successful at clarifying building regs for local Govs
✅Numerous acts passed between 1851-1875
✅Birmingham began a huge slum clearance programme
❌Legislation was passed but the new buildings did not necessarily conform
❌Laws difficult to enforce
❌There were vested interests
❌Legislation primarily concerned with new houses only
❌Artisans and labourers Dwellings Acts were permissive
❌Some people were actually made homeless because of slum clearance
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What vaccinations initiative was set up? What were the successes and failures?
- Created by Jenner in the 1790s
- Vaccines were optional for all until some legislation in mid-1800s
- Smallpox
✅1808 a government grant promoted vaccination- National Vaccine Establishment
✅1840-Vaccines offered free of charge via Poor Law staff
✅1853- parents had to have children vaccinated or they were fined
✅1871- Local health Boards would fine parents and threat of prison
❌Vaccination was expensive- used by upper classes
❌Lots of opposition- anti-vaccine movement
❌The Leicester method (quarantine and isolation) grew in popularity instead
❌200,000 exemption certificates issued by 1898
❌Demonstrates that government initiatives were not enough to improve public health
❌Legislation only applied to children
What medical officers of health initiative was set up?
- The Public Health Act Of 1875 made it compulsory for all local authorities it appoint someone in charge of public health- this person was known as a medical officer of health
- Medical officers were usually trained as doctors or surgeons
✅Liverpool’s medical officer of health, William Henry Duncan appt in 1847 was seen as exemplary John Simon in London also very successful
✅Compulsory medical officers from 1875
✅After 1888 medical officers had be fully qualified
✅Public health became the ‘norm’ in local government and elections
❌Most local councillors chosen because promised to keep public health rates low middle class councillors were not convinced about spending taxpayers money on public health
❌Medical officers poorly paid and so it was often a second job
❌1875 legislation was poorly implemented
MORE DETAIL IN NOTES
What TB and sanatoria government initiative was set up? What was it successes and failures?
- TB was the biggest killer of the 19th century. It spread rapidly because of poor housing conditions and overcrowding in industrial cities
- Local officers of health took some immediate action eg: leaflets issuing advice to prevent spitting
✅Local officers of health were able to convince people how simple steps could prevent poor public health
✅Central government ordered the pasteurisation of milk in 1922.Further acts made this widely available to school children
✅Sanatoria (places of isolation) were set up- by 1930 there were 500
❌Antibiotic cures for TB did not come until after the Second World War
❌Surgery for the effects of TB was still frequent requirement
❌Local medical officers took on the responsibility a lot more than national government (national government only really for children with TB)
MORE DETAIL IN NOTES
What government initiatives were made for children? Successes and failures?
- The Education (provisional of meals Act) 1904-allowed Local authorities to use public money to provide free school meals for the children of needy parents
- the Education Act 1907 set up a school medical service
- Children and young persons act 1908- protected children from neglect and cruelty
✅Established the principle that the state could take on the role of a parent (and that children were not seen as paupers)
✅A medical dept was set up for children, and administration by local authorities . This led to improvements in other areas of public health
✅Children became a priority for public health. Attitudes no longer related to the immorality of their parents
❌Local government took on the responsibility rather than national government (although the decisions did come from national government)
❌Difficult therefore to impose in some areas
Who was Margaret McMillan?
(1860-1931)
- representative of the ILP for the Bradford School Board, elected as only women member in 1894
- Fought long and hard for the health and welfare of the children of the poor
- first baths were installed
- Dr James Kerr, Margaret persuaded the school Board to institute medical inspections, set up a school clinic and establish a system whereby children were given free school meals
- The Bradford initiative was one of many instituted by Margaret
What was significant about the town of Rochdale?
- Prosperous town in the South Pennines
- Flourishing woollen mills, silk manufacturers, bleachers and dyers, buy the cotton industry was dominant
- first co-operative society founded there in 1844
- increasing prosperity throughout 19th century was reflected in its governance
- became a parliamentary borough
Good example to use!!
Implementing the public health Act 1848:
- Many ways the act could could be avoided or undermined so its implementation and therefore effectiveness was patchy
- Act was overshadowed by second cholera outbreak-only when this died down could focus its whole attention on more general public health issues
- didn’t have the same impact as 1834 poor law amendment act-Public and government were not convinced
- no existing structure that could be reformed, medical knowledge was not giving clear messages, vested interests eg: water companies remained strong
- sanitary engineering was expensive
- marked the beginning of the states intervention in public health matters
- 1939 increased understanding- the pioneering work of individuals and increasing willingness of local authorities meant during this period, public health improved massively eg:housing
What were the successes of the public health Act of 1848?
- in 1850 192 towns asked for new public health regulations to be applied and the act had been applied to 32 of them
- by 1853 this had risen to 284 petitions and there 182 towns where the act had been applied
- Town councils that took the act even further and through private acts of parliament obtained more sweeping powers
What were the failures of the public health of 1848?
- Towns like Rochdale were rare or have to be put in perspective eg: vested interests and reluctance by many local authorities
- In Lancashire only 400,000 of it’s 2.5 million people were living under some sort of public health Board
- of the 187 major towns in England and Wales only 29 had powers of draining and cleansing in the hands of one Board, 30 had absolutely no powers over public health (in hands of independent commissioners), 62 had no public health authority whatsoever.
- local boards of health were frequently simply the existing town co-operation under a different guise. Therefore governed by the same vested interests and moved in the same slow and cautious way- hesitancy was reluctance to spend money and ignorance of sanitary engineering needed put for a minority they were constrained by pre-1848 private improvement acts
- eg: lavatories flushed into sewers that emptied into the nearest watercourse from which drinking water was taken
Successes and failures of local government rather than the national government:(table)
+Passed their own public acts eg: London, Liverpool, Leeds and Manchester
+Local Government took action on housing eg: Birmingham slums
+Local medical officers of health appointed
+Sanatoria set up
-Town improvement committees were seen as corrupt- oligarchies and vested interests
What were the successes and failures of the national government against the local government?
+Numerous housing acts passed between 1851-1875
+Government support for vaccinations, including funding
+Made medical officers compulsory
+TB support for children
+State responsibility- attitudes
-laws difficult for enforcement, permissive etc
Who was Edward Jenner?
1749-1823
- smallpox killed 10% of the population rising to 20% in towns- overcrowding
- In children, smallpox accounted for 1/3rd of all deaths
- 1773 EJ was a local doctor in Berkeley Gloucestershire
- Studied as a surgeon in London, 1788 was made a fellow of the Royal Society
What did Edward Jenner do?
- Jenner aimed for probe that someone who had been infected with cowpox could not catch smallpox
- Before Edward Jenner they used a process known as variolisation to try and stop the spread of disease. The early inoculation meant they gave a small amount of smallpox to a healthy individual in hope they would develop a mild form of smallpox and be protected from the disease. But some had a severe and disfiguring version of the disease and died-people were desperate
- 1796 Sarah Nelmes consulted Jenner about the cowpox myth of curing/preventing smallpox. To test it he took some of gender pus from Sarah’s blisters and gave it to James Phipps a small boy. He developed a fever but recovered quickly. This established cowpox could be passed from human to human. To see if the cowpox bad given Phipps immunity from smallpox Jenner variolated him- didn’t get smallpox
- Tested this with 23 patients- nine got smallpox, found cowpox gave immunity to smallpox
What was his significance for public health?
- found cowpox have immunity to smallpox and developed a vaccination for it
- over 100 leading London doctors signed a letter supporting his research and declaring their intention to vaccinate
- parliament voted him £30,000 to establish a vaccination clinic
- Jenner supplied doctors around the world with cowpox material to provide a vaccine safely and without contamination- developed a technique
- participated in conferences and learned discussions about the nature of immunity
What are the drawbacks of Jenner’s contribution to public health:
- At first the Royal Society refused to publish his results (country doctors- not professional)
- Jenner couldn’t explain how and why his experimentation worked
- some reluctance to use the vaccine as they made an income from variolation
- Jenner published his results at his own expense in 1798- ‘An enquiry into the causes and effects of Variola Vaccinae’ , known by the name of cowpox
Who was Edwin Chadwick?
1800-90
- associated with the poor law reform and with public health reform
- persuaded and bullied government to invest in public health reform
- limited finances wrote for ‘Westminster Review’ usually about scientific principles that could be applied to various areas of government. Jeremy Bentham Chadwick literary secretary saw this. Bentham’s belief in the doctrine of utility drove Chadwick to a professional life
What did Chadwick do?
-Made the connection between poor public health and disease
-typhus epidemic (1837-38) meant more apply for poor relief. Led to the commissioning of- ‘Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain’
-set up an enquiry, chose three doctors:
🥼Neil Arnott: ship’s surgeon, identified connections between ‘exotic’ diseases like cholera and sanitation
🥼James Kay- reported on the poor in Manchester
🥼Southwood Smith- London Fever Hospital- physician
-drew conclusions and made some convincing arguments eg:no matter how expensive sanitary improvements would be, the cost of pauperism as a result of inaction would be even higher, established that healthy conditions could not be achieved with overcrowding, poor ventilation, inadequate water supply…= resulted in the ‘Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring population of Great Britain’-1842
-Chadwick did briefings in the Royal Commission set up by the government with both anecdotal and statistical evidence- commission report (1844) upheld Chadwick’s findings
-meant the Public Health Act 1848 was passed by Parliament
-set up a general board of health whereby Chadwick was appointed as one of the sanitary commissioners
What was significant about his contribution to public health?
- Raised awareness through making key enquiries and through published reports and works
- Led to the setting up of Boards like the General Board of Health and legislation like the 1848 Public Health Act
- made key connections eg: poor public health and disease which led to changes eg: through GBH clean water went to all dwellings, pipes were used to carry water, abolished shallow drinking wells, built sewerage systems (where waste only went to farm land as fertiliser)
- awarded a pension of £1000 a year and continued to give voluntary advice in all sides about health and sanitation
- In 1884 he was appointed the first president of the Association of Sanitary inspectors
- received a knighthood
What were the drawbacks of Chadwick’s contribution to public health?
- GBH ans him were not liked seen as arrogant and impatient
- Agreed to design in 1854 and House of Commons only agreed to renew the Board’s mandate if Chadwick was no longer a commissioner
- Tory government in 1842 rejected Chadwick’s report- ‘report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring population of Great Britain’
- GBH was resented by localities due to his impatience with reform
- Took a long time, a lot of his advice was ignored/ overlooked
Who was John snow?
1813-1858
- cholera had spread from India via trade routes to Europe
- cholera had 4 big epidemics:
1) 1831-32=32,000 deaths
2) 1848-49=62,000 deaths
3) 1853-54=20,000 deaths
4) 1866-67=14,000 deaths - 1831 Snow had fought the cholera outbreak in Newcastle- convinced cholera was water-borne
- retiring nature + long hold miasmic theory by doctors, surgeons, administrations and the public stopped him from acting