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Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 11:57 am
by littleruins
Hi there,I am currently looking into the history of disease in Leeds and was wondering if anyone could think of any infections or diseases that were common in Leeds during the 1940s and particularly 1950s. I am aware that asthma would have been a particular issue due to smog but was wondering of any others that may have arisen due to living conditions etc.Many thanks if you have any information / recommended reading.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 12:20 pm
by Johnny39
littleruins wrote: Hi there,I am currently looking into the history of disease in Leeds and was wondering if anyone could think of any infections or diseases that were common in Leeds during the 1940s and particularly 1950s. I am aware that asthma would have been a particular issue due to smog but was wondering of any others that may have arisen due to living conditions etc.Many thanks if you have any information / recommended reading. Diphtheria and Poliomyelitis - both were prevalent when I was a kid in the 40's.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 12:21 pm
by Johnny39
Johnny39 wrote: littleruins wrote: Hi there,I am currently looking into the history of disease in Leeds and was wondering if anyone could think of any infections or diseases that were common in Leeds during the 1940s and particularly 1950s. I am aware that asthma would have been a particular issue due to smog but was wondering of any others that may have arisen due to living conditions etc.Many thanks if you have any information / recommended reading. Diphtheria and Poliomyelitis - both were prevalent when I was a kid in the 40's. and I forgot Scarlet Fever.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 12:25 pm
by Johnny39
They seem to come flooding back - Smallpox of course.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 1:08 pm
by buffaloskinner
Sexually transmitted diseases were on the increase with special clinics in the hospitals.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 1:30 pm
by biofichompinc
Tuberculosis.I am sure I read somewhere recently that cases of TB in Leeds during the 1990's (!) had actually risen.Perhaps a visit to the Thackray Medical Museum might be just what the doctor ordered. The 50's is what I would classify as modern history. They must have something.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 2:38 pm
by James
Asthma isn't infectious. It's not a fully understood disorder, but there is probably an inherited disposition to develop it. Most children in the 1940s could expect to suffer from a series of infectious diseases like measles, rubella (German measles), whooping cough, mumps, and chickenpox. Usually they recovered without complications and the infection gave them immunity for life.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 2:45 pm
by Riponian
Measles, German Measles, Mumps and Chicken Pox were generally common even in the 60's when most of us went down with them during our schooling. Whooping cough was the only one they seemed to bother about innoculating against. Having fought them off earlier in life, I'm sure it gives us a stronger immune system rather than having jabs for just about everything they can think of.Scarlet Fever was the one that was supposedly linked to poverty, even then, and very rare.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 2:52 pm
by Johnny39
I think it was Killingbeck Hospital that was known to us kids as the "Fever Hospital". I always get Seacroft and Killingbeck Hospitals mixed up.
Posted: Thu 04 Oct, 2012 3:12 pm
by Jogon
Think one is more convenient for the graveyard. And Asda.I knew it as Fever Hozzy