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CHRONIC
CONDITIONS IN
HEALTH AND
WEALTH
Waterford County Archivist
Joanne Rothwell
PUBLIC HEALTH
High   mortality rates and high rates of fever
 in Ireland – clearly linked to poverty
Tackling public health required tackling
 poverty
Increasing government role
Improving living conditions
Legislation
GOVERNMENT BODIES
LocalBoards of Health, 1818 - dispensaries
General Board of Public Health – March1820
 (Cholera Board in 1832) statistics and grants
Poor Law Commissioners – Local
 Government Board
Grand Jury
Boards of Guardians
LEGISLATION
 Medical Charities, Houses of Industry
 1765 – clergy of established church a corporation for the
  erection of Fever Hospitals
 1807 Grand Juries – presentments for Fever Hospitals £100
 National Vaccine Establishment, 1808
 Poor Employment Act, 1817
 Local Boards of Health, 1818
 Central Board of Health, 1820
 Poor Law Act, 1838
 Vaccination Extension Act, 1840, Compulsory Act, 1863
 Medical Charities Act, 1851
 Public Health Ireland Act, 1878
 Labourers Ireland Acts 1883-onwards
GOVERNMENT ROLE
Vaccination
Control of Disease
Health Care
Clean Water
Housing
MEDICAL CHARITIES
 Dispensaries   and Fever Hospitals
 Funded by private subscription
 Uneven distribution – clustered in wealthier areas
 Medical Charities Act, 1851 – “act to provide for the better
  distribution, support and management of medical charities
  in Ireland” – hospitals and dispensaries under the Poor Law
  Unions
 Medical Charities Commissioners
 By 1857 770 doctors through the dispensary system
VACCINATION: SLOW START
   Inoculation – practised in the 18th century. In 19th century increasing
    evidence of dangers, doctors petition against it
   Vaccination – 1796 Jenner, 1808 Free Vaccinations, poor uptake
   Vaccination Extension Act, 1840
   Operated by Board of Guardians – Workhouses (stigma)
   Vaccination Stations – away from Workhouse door so patients didn’t
    mix with paupers
   Contracted to dispensary doctors- or if unwilling to accept contracts to
    apothecaries
   1 shilling/6d a head- poor terms. Slowed implementation considerably
   Costs to PLUs – avoided implementation
   Famine - collapsed
VACCINATION
 Medical  Charities Act – Commissioners pursued
  vaccination
 Prosecution of inoculators
 No extra fees to Dispensary Doctors for vaccinations
 Act to further vaccination in Ireland, 1858- new
  vaccination stations and separate fee of £1 for every 20
  cases to doctors
 Doctors vaccinated in peoples homes – following up
  unvaccinated cases
 Improvements in the rates of vaccination
COMPULSORY
  VACCINATION
 Compulsory   Vaccination, 1863 – within 6mths of birth,
  inspected 1 week after vaccination and cert issued to parent
  and the registrar
 Dispensary doctors paid 1 shilling per case
 Fine of 10 shillings for failure to vaccinate a child
 c.1500 prosecutions under the Act in 1870
 Boosted vaccination numbers by over one third in Ireland
 Dispensary doctors became registrars for vaccination –
  recording the outcome having carried out the vaccination
 Prosecutions – defaulters persuaded by the dispensary
  doctors rather than prosecuted
VACCINATION: SUCCESS
“near  approach to the total extinction of small-
 pox” Annual Reports of PL Comms 1867-
 1870
1500 deaths pa in 1850s to less than 900 by
 1864, 20 deaths in 1867
1871/2 Smallpox epidemic (4000 dead) –
 increase in vaccination as a result
Irish system praised by English medical men
 where the paperwork was split between
 practitioner and registrar
CONTROL OF DISEASE
Dispensaries  and Fever Hospitals under
 Local Boards of Health – part funded by
 Grand Jury but mainly reliant on private
 subscriptions
Depended on advocacy and powerful
 supporters
Medical Charities Act, 1851 – control of
 dispensaries to Poor Law Unions
District Medical Officers
Provision of drugs
HEALTHCARE
   4 January 1851 28,922 patients were registered in 163 workhouse
    hospitals – 14% of the workhouse population on that day
   Increasing healthcare role of Workhouses – less “able bodied inmates”
   Boards of Guardians tended to use inmates as nursing staff/attendants –
    extra rations
   “...generally taken from the lowest class, restrained by no sense either of
    decency or religion, loud voiced, quarrelsome and abusive...”
   1861 Limerick Board of Guardians were the first to win permission to
    allow nuns to nurse in the workhouse hospital
   “highest moral qualities”
   By 1895 63 Boards and by 1903 84 Boards were employing nuns as
    nurses
   Competency – Training
   Night Nursing
   1881 Medical Press and Circular called for probationary nurses to be
    trained in workhouses
   1890s – Trained nurses
TRAINED NURSES
Freeman’s    Journal, 1895
“What is a trained nurse? a chit of a girl
 with a paper certificate from some Dublin
 Hospital where, according to the hospital
 doctors, not even the medical student is
 properly taught his business, or, a devoted
 nun who has been attending the sick and
 assisting their medical attendant for years”
HEALTHCARE: DOCTORS
   Medical Charities Dispensary Doctors – additional duty to own private
    practices.
   PLU Dispensary Doctors – initially thought to be lesser experienced and
    qualified doctors i.e. couldn’t get enough patients as private practitioners
   Quality of doctors – Dr. Baylor, Lismore
   Doctors built up good reputations within their dispensary districts
   Additional assistance called in by dispensary and Fever Hospital doctors
    where required e.g. Amputation – a bill of £3:3:0 was furnished the
    Guardians by Dr. Currey, Lismore for amputating the arm of John
    Carthy at the Lismore Union Workhouse on 19th February 1875. “The
    Board consider the bill should be paid by the person who engaged his services on that
    occasion and not by the Guardians”
 Sending cases to specialists for treatment e.g. Workhouse Drs. sent
  cases to Waterford Infirmary or to Dublin hospitals for treatment
 Doctors advocated for improvements to diet, living conditions and
  access to healthcare for their patients
CLEAN WATER
Water   Supply Schemes – private and
 municipal
Rural areas – not serviced
Public Health Act, 1878 – PLUs funding water
 supply schemes.
Funded by Local Government Board – loans
 funds
New schemes
Extensions from existing schemes
Water Testing – safe water
SEWAGE SCHEMES
Typhoid  – outbreaks as a result of faecal matter in
 water supply
Dungarvan SS 1901 a direct result of an outbreak of
 enteric fever and typhus in October 1898
Public Nuisances – night soil
Sanitary Officers – inspections and reports
Notices and fines issued for non-compliance re:
 provision of facilities
Copyright Waterford
County Archives
HOUSING: HOVELS
Housing  unfit for human habitation
No standards for landlords to meet
Some landlords built to good designs but
 no onus on them to do so
Often labourers built their own shanty
 houses on the farm
Surveys carried out among landlords prior
 to introduction of Labourers Ireland Act,
 1883 – developing a standard
Copyright
Waterford
County
Archives
LABOURERS IRELAND ACTS
 Labourers    Ireland Acts 1883 onwards
 Housing for agricultural labourers – had to be a need for
  labourers in the area
 PLU – determined if there was a need for labourers cottages,
  reports from relieving officers and engineers, set up a
  scheme and advertised it.
 CPO of land for cottages – disputes with landowners
 Initially cottage with ½ an acre but later 1 acre provided
 Plot laid out by the PLU engineer
 Built to a standard set of designs
 Building work contracted out – signed off by the engineer
 On completion – applications made by labourers and
  assigned cottages by votes of the Board members
IMPROVEMENTS TO
 HOUSING
Labourers cottages set a standard
Relieving  Officers – visited poor in their
 homes and reported on living conditions
Problems with labourers cottages – PLU
 liable for repairs
Problems with private homes – relieving
 officer or sanitary officer could report and
 fine offenders
Outbreak of disease – Sanitary Officer
 responsible for arranging for all bedding etc.
 to be burnt and house to be whitewashed
CONCLUSION
Is Fearr an tSláinte ná na Táinte? – in the
 18th and 19th centuries poverty was directly
 responsible for poor health and increased
 exposure to disease
Improvements were made
However, health was very dependent on
 wealth so,
In order to be healthy it was better to be
 wealthy

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Chronic Conditions in Health and Wealth

  • 1. CHRONIC CONDITIONS IN HEALTH AND WEALTH Waterford County Archivist Joanne Rothwell
  • 2. PUBLIC HEALTH High mortality rates and high rates of fever in Ireland – clearly linked to poverty Tackling public health required tackling poverty Increasing government role Improving living conditions Legislation
  • 3. GOVERNMENT BODIES LocalBoards of Health, 1818 - dispensaries General Board of Public Health – March1820 (Cholera Board in 1832) statistics and grants Poor Law Commissioners – Local Government Board Grand Jury Boards of Guardians
  • 4. LEGISLATION  Medical Charities, Houses of Industry  1765 – clergy of established church a corporation for the erection of Fever Hospitals  1807 Grand Juries – presentments for Fever Hospitals £100  National Vaccine Establishment, 1808  Poor Employment Act, 1817  Local Boards of Health, 1818  Central Board of Health, 1820  Poor Law Act, 1838  Vaccination Extension Act, 1840, Compulsory Act, 1863  Medical Charities Act, 1851  Public Health Ireland Act, 1878  Labourers Ireland Acts 1883-onwards
  • 5. GOVERNMENT ROLE Vaccination Control of Disease Health Care Clean Water Housing
  • 6. MEDICAL CHARITIES  Dispensaries and Fever Hospitals  Funded by private subscription  Uneven distribution – clustered in wealthier areas  Medical Charities Act, 1851 – “act to provide for the better distribution, support and management of medical charities in Ireland” – hospitals and dispensaries under the Poor Law Unions  Medical Charities Commissioners  By 1857 770 doctors through the dispensary system
  • 7. VACCINATION: SLOW START  Inoculation – practised in the 18th century. In 19th century increasing evidence of dangers, doctors petition against it  Vaccination – 1796 Jenner, 1808 Free Vaccinations, poor uptake  Vaccination Extension Act, 1840  Operated by Board of Guardians – Workhouses (stigma)  Vaccination Stations – away from Workhouse door so patients didn’t mix with paupers  Contracted to dispensary doctors- or if unwilling to accept contracts to apothecaries  1 shilling/6d a head- poor terms. Slowed implementation considerably  Costs to PLUs – avoided implementation  Famine - collapsed
  • 8. VACCINATION  Medical Charities Act – Commissioners pursued vaccination  Prosecution of inoculators  No extra fees to Dispensary Doctors for vaccinations  Act to further vaccination in Ireland, 1858- new vaccination stations and separate fee of £1 for every 20 cases to doctors  Doctors vaccinated in peoples homes – following up unvaccinated cases  Improvements in the rates of vaccination
  • 9. COMPULSORY VACCINATION  Compulsory Vaccination, 1863 – within 6mths of birth, inspected 1 week after vaccination and cert issued to parent and the registrar  Dispensary doctors paid 1 shilling per case  Fine of 10 shillings for failure to vaccinate a child  c.1500 prosecutions under the Act in 1870  Boosted vaccination numbers by over one third in Ireland  Dispensary doctors became registrars for vaccination – recording the outcome having carried out the vaccination  Prosecutions – defaulters persuaded by the dispensary doctors rather than prosecuted
  • 10. VACCINATION: SUCCESS “near approach to the total extinction of small- pox” Annual Reports of PL Comms 1867- 1870 1500 deaths pa in 1850s to less than 900 by 1864, 20 deaths in 1867 1871/2 Smallpox epidemic (4000 dead) – increase in vaccination as a result Irish system praised by English medical men where the paperwork was split between practitioner and registrar
  • 11. CONTROL OF DISEASE Dispensaries and Fever Hospitals under Local Boards of Health – part funded by Grand Jury but mainly reliant on private subscriptions Depended on advocacy and powerful supporters Medical Charities Act, 1851 – control of dispensaries to Poor Law Unions District Medical Officers Provision of drugs
  • 12.
  • 13. HEALTHCARE  4 January 1851 28,922 patients were registered in 163 workhouse hospitals – 14% of the workhouse population on that day  Increasing healthcare role of Workhouses – less “able bodied inmates”  Boards of Guardians tended to use inmates as nursing staff/attendants – extra rations  “...generally taken from the lowest class, restrained by no sense either of decency or religion, loud voiced, quarrelsome and abusive...”  1861 Limerick Board of Guardians were the first to win permission to allow nuns to nurse in the workhouse hospital  “highest moral qualities”  By 1895 63 Boards and by 1903 84 Boards were employing nuns as nurses  Competency – Training  Night Nursing  1881 Medical Press and Circular called for probationary nurses to be trained in workhouses  1890s – Trained nurses
  • 14. TRAINED NURSES Freeman’s Journal, 1895 “What is a trained nurse? a chit of a girl with a paper certificate from some Dublin Hospital where, according to the hospital doctors, not even the medical student is properly taught his business, or, a devoted nun who has been attending the sick and assisting their medical attendant for years”
  • 15. HEALTHCARE: DOCTORS  Medical Charities Dispensary Doctors – additional duty to own private practices.  PLU Dispensary Doctors – initially thought to be lesser experienced and qualified doctors i.e. couldn’t get enough patients as private practitioners  Quality of doctors – Dr. Baylor, Lismore  Doctors built up good reputations within their dispensary districts  Additional assistance called in by dispensary and Fever Hospital doctors where required e.g. Amputation – a bill of £3:3:0 was furnished the Guardians by Dr. Currey, Lismore for amputating the arm of John Carthy at the Lismore Union Workhouse on 19th February 1875. “The Board consider the bill should be paid by the person who engaged his services on that occasion and not by the Guardians”  Sending cases to specialists for treatment e.g. Workhouse Drs. sent cases to Waterford Infirmary or to Dublin hospitals for treatment  Doctors advocated for improvements to diet, living conditions and access to healthcare for their patients
  • 16. CLEAN WATER Water Supply Schemes – private and municipal Rural areas – not serviced Public Health Act, 1878 – PLUs funding water supply schemes. Funded by Local Government Board – loans funds New schemes Extensions from existing schemes Water Testing – safe water
  • 17. SEWAGE SCHEMES Typhoid – outbreaks as a result of faecal matter in water supply Dungarvan SS 1901 a direct result of an outbreak of enteric fever and typhus in October 1898 Public Nuisances – night soil Sanitary Officers – inspections and reports Notices and fines issued for non-compliance re: provision of facilities
  • 19. HOUSING: HOVELS Housing unfit for human habitation No standards for landlords to meet Some landlords built to good designs but no onus on them to do so Often labourers built their own shanty houses on the farm Surveys carried out among landlords prior to introduction of Labourers Ireland Act, 1883 – developing a standard
  • 21. LABOURERS IRELAND ACTS  Labourers Ireland Acts 1883 onwards  Housing for agricultural labourers – had to be a need for labourers in the area  PLU – determined if there was a need for labourers cottages, reports from relieving officers and engineers, set up a scheme and advertised it.  CPO of land for cottages – disputes with landowners  Initially cottage with ½ an acre but later 1 acre provided  Plot laid out by the PLU engineer  Built to a standard set of designs  Building work contracted out – signed off by the engineer  On completion – applications made by labourers and assigned cottages by votes of the Board members
  • 22. IMPROVEMENTS TO HOUSING Labourers cottages set a standard Relieving Officers – visited poor in their homes and reported on living conditions Problems with labourers cottages – PLU liable for repairs Problems with private homes – relieving officer or sanitary officer could report and fine offenders Outbreak of disease – Sanitary Officer responsible for arranging for all bedding etc. to be burnt and house to be whitewashed
  • 23. CONCLUSION Is Fearr an tSláinte ná na Táinte? – in the 18th and 19th centuries poverty was directly responsible for poor health and increased exposure to disease Improvements were made However, health was very dependent on wealth so, In order to be healthy it was better to be wealthy

Editor's Notes

  1. Phthisis – consumption TP