Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The 1854 Broad Street Cholera Outbreak (Encore)
Episode Date: April 26, 2024In 1854 an unusually severe outbreak of cholera occurred in London. While cholera was not an uncommon disease, physicians at the time weren’t sure what caused it. This time, one doctor took a co...mpletely different approach, stopping the epidemic and ushering in a new field of medicine. Learn more about John Snow and the Broad Street cholera outbreak of 1854 on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Available nationally, look for a bottle of Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond at your local store. Find out more at heavenhilldistillery.com/hh-bottled-in-bond.php Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free offer and get $20 off. Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month. Use the code EverythingEverywhere for a 20% discount on a subscription at Newspapers.com. Visit meminto.com and get 15% off with code EED15. Listen to Expedition Unknown wherever you get your podcasts. Get started with a $13 trial set for just $3 at harrys.com/EVERYTHING. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey everyone, this is Gary, and if you can tell by the sound of my voice, I am really sick. I came down
with something. I can barely talk, and I have coughing fits about every 30 seconds. So today is an
encore episode, and hopefully I'll be back on my feet very soon. In 1854, an unusually severe
outbreak of cholera occurred in London. While cholera was not an uncommon disease, physicians at the time
weren't sure what caused it. This time, one doctor took a completely different approach, stopping the
epidemic and ushering in a new field of medicine.
Learn more about John Snow and the Broad Street cholera outbreak of 1854 on this episode
of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story
that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us.
every week on the ThuLine podcast from NPR.
Cholera is a disease you don't hear about as much anymore.
While people are still affected by the disease and some die from it,
it's something that can be treated and is even easier to prevent.
However, at one time, cholera used to be one of the deadliest diseases in the world.
Cholera comes from the bacteria Vibrio cholerai, which probably originated in India.
The bacteria causes an infection of the small intestine, resulting in severe diarrhea,
vomiting and muscle cramps.
Cholera-induced diarrhea can be so bad that it can result in severe dehydration and electrolyte imbalance,
and it's even possible in severe cases to go from first symptoms to death in a matter of hours.
Today, the fatality rates from cholera are low, but in the past, before treatments were developed,
it was possible to see fatality rates as high as 50%.
So, just to lay the foundation for the story, cholera was a very nasty disease.
In the mid-19th century, doctors were very familiar with cholera, but weren't sure what caused it.
Modern medicine hadn't yet been fully developed, and there was competing theories as to what caused cholera.
The first theory, and one which had been around for over 2,000 years, was the miasma theory.
The miasma theory held that diseases such as cholera and the plague were spread by foul air.
The air was contaminated by rotting organic matter.
Hence, if you were around a dead body or raw sewage, the miasmas which end up,
emanated from the organic materials were the cause of the disease. The miasma theory dates back to
at least ancient Greece in the 4th century BC and the Greek physician Hippocrates. The ancient Chinese
also had a miasma theory, as did ancient India. If you've ever seen plague mass that doctors
used during the black death, which had these enormous protrusions that looked like a bird's beak,
they actually served a purpose. They were there to keep the miasma away. So the miasma theory
was well-established and was the predominant theory among physicians at the time. The other theory,
which was relatively new, was called germ theory. The theory of germs was based on the discoveries
of the Dutch scientist Antony von Leyenhook, who was the first person to discover single-cell organisms
under a microscope. The germ theory held that cholera was spread by these unseen microbes,
which found their way from person to person via the water supply. No one knew exactly what
microbe was the culprit, but germ theory held that it must have been a microbe. With that background,
we arrive in London's 1854 cholera outbreak. A particularly bad outbreak had hit the Soho district in London.
If you're familiar with Soho, it's a rather upscale neighborhood today. However, in the mid-19th century,
it was anything but. It was a location of many animal processing facilities, including slaughterhouses,
pens with animals, and rendering plants. There was literally tons of animal waste, decaying organic matter,
and buildings with leaky cesspools.
Basically, the whole area was filthy,
and most of this waste was flushed into a very underdeveloped sewer system,
which went into the River Thames.
Enter into the story, John Snow.
Snow was the bastard son of Eddard Stark
and was raised at the Castle Winterfell.
He had two brothers...
Wait, hold it, sorry.
Wrong John Snow.
John Snow was born into a poor family in York, England in 1813.
However, he was very intelligent
and managed to get an apprenticeship with a doctor
in Newcastle-upon-Tyne at the age of 14. At the time, being a physician was more of a trade than a science.
You learned on the job, and it didn't necessarily mean that you had to attend school.
Snow encountered his first cholera epidemic in 1832 at a coal-mining village called Killingworth.
He held several other positions and finally did attend a medical school in London in 1836,
earning his MD. He had a very distinguished career, becoming a member of the Royal College of Physicians,
the Royal College of Surgeons, and was a founding member of the Epidemiological Society of London.
When the cholera outbreak occurred in 1854, it was the third such outbreak in recent memory,
with outbreaks having occurred in 1832 and 1849.
Snow did not buy into the dominant theory of miasma, and believed in the germ theory,
even though there was still a lot that had to be figured out about germs.
He had written a paper in 1849 titled On the Mode of Communication of Cholera.
Snow did something very different in his approach to the outbreak.
He approached it analytically.
Rather than just treating this like every other cholera epidemic, he started collecting data.
He methodically began to record all the deaths, and most importantly, where they occurred.
He plotted all the deaths on a map to see if he could determine if there was any pattern.
And he discovered that there was.
Several things, actually.
People in London received their water from several different companies.
The companies which delivered water usually delivered it to
everyone in a neighborhood, regardless of income or social status. Moreover, there were sharp
divisions between who received water from what company. Two homes on opposite sides of a street
may have water provided by different corporations. Some companies would get their water from the Thames
River, and other companies got their water from other sources. There were also very noticeable
differences in how they filtered and purified their water. Some companies would deliver water with
animal hairs and other visible impurities, and other companies would provide some filtration.
He looked at where the cholera deaths occurred and found that who you got your water from
made a huge difference in who got sick and died.
He found that the Southwark and Vauxhall Waterworks and the Lambeth Waterworks Company
both had very high rates of cholera amongst their customers.
They both took their water from the Thames and didn't filter their water.
Other water companies, such as the New River Company and the Chelsea Company,
supplied better quality water and didn't have nearly as many cases of cholera.
What John Snow didn't know is that he had conducted one of the first double-blind studies.
He was able to isolate the variable of water supply, and everything else was kept pretty much the same.
The houses, the neighborhoods, and the people were pretty much the same across all the water companies.
On August 31, 1854, a particularly bad outbreak occurred in the block surrounding the Broad Street area,
today called Broadwick Street.
Over a three-day period, 127 people died, and by September 10th,
500 people had died. Most of the residents fled the area to try to get away from the disease.
Many of those who were sick were taken to a Middlesex hospital where they were treated by one
Florence Nightingale, who was considered to be the founder of modern nursing, and who will be
the subject of a future episode. Snow went into the neighborhood and started talking to people
to try to get an idea of what might be happening. He also plotted all the deaths on a map of the
neighborhood and found that they all centered around one particular spot. With the data he
collected, and from talking to people in the neighborhood, Snow figured out that the cause of the
outbreak was a public water pump on the corner of Broad and Cambridge, now called Lexington
Street. Snow walked down to the pump and removed the handle so that nobody could get water
from it anymore. Removing the handle basically stopped the outbreak in the neighborhood.
Snow later wrote in his own words, quote, on proceeding to the spot, I found that nearly all the
deaths had taken place within a short distance of the Broad Street pump. There were only 10 deaths in
households situated decidedly nearer to another street pump. In five of these cases, the families of
the deceased person informed me that they always sent to the pump in Broad Street, and that they
preferred the water to that of the pumps which were nearer. In three of the other cases, the deceased
were children who went to school near the pump in Broad Street. With regard to the deaths occurring
in the locality belonging to the pump, there were 61 instances in which I was informed that the deceased
used to drink the pump water from Broad Street, either constantly or occasionally.
The result of the inquiry was then that there had been no particular outbake or prevalence of
cholera in this part of London, except among the persons who were in the habit of drinking the
water from the above-mentioned pump well. End quote. It seemed like John Snow had built a
slam-dunk case for the germ theory of the spread of cholera by water. However, after the outbreak subsided,
the London Board of Health conducted an investigation into the cause of the epidemic.
epidemic. Even after determining that the water companies had contaminated water, they concluded that
the ultimate cause of the cholera outbreak was my asthma. If this story sounds familiar, it might
remind you of a previous episode on Ignaz Semmelweis, the 19th century Hungarian doctor who
discovered that washing your hands would decrease mortality rates when delivering babies. Despite the
very clear evidence that washing your hands worked, his conclusions were rejected by the
medical establishment at the time. Even though the work of John Snow wasn't immediately accepted,
it eventually laid the foundation for the acceptance of the germ theory of disease just a few decades
later. Snow's work on tracking the causes of the cholera outbreak is considered to be the basis
of the modern science of epidemiology. Today, whenever there's an outbreak of a disease,
you'll find epidemiologists gathering data to try to find the source. The findings of John Snow
were later used for improvements in the water and waste management systems of London.
He was also responsible for the adoption of anesthesia in surgery.
Only four years after the outbreak in 1858, he died at the age of 45 of a stroke.
If you happen to be in London, you can visit the pump's actual location which caused the Broad Street cholera outbreak.
There is a replica of the pump located at the corner of Broadwick and Lexington streets.
And you'll know you're in the right place because it's right outside of a pub called the John Snow.
There's also a John Snow Society that will occasionally meet at the John Snow Pub.
While more people are probably familiar with John Snow as a character from Game of Thrones,
more attention should probably be given to the real John Snow,
who help pave the way for the creation of modern medicine.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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including the show's producers.
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