hea 4 Measles in the Potteries.
For children of measles, mumps and rubella in the middle ages and Victorian times caused considerable concern to medical professionals who rightly feared a major outbreak with terrifying consequences including the loss of life. Since 1796, when Edward Jenner an English country doctor introduced a vaccine for smallpox it has saved more lives worldwide than any other vaccine to date. However, in the case of measles in was not until 1963 that a vaccine became available to protect mainly children but also adults.
The use of historical data used in this article helps us to evaluate and understand this importance of vaccination today. It shows that every town in the potteries was affected by measles in epidemic proportions every few years during the 19th century. By this time the potteries had started to expand as a result of industrialisation but with it came poor cramped houses, almost built on top of one another and frequently in squares with poor or no sanitation; lack of clean drinking water; the close proximity of houses and cess pits. In many cases as soon as measles retracted from one area, another would become infected. In Newcastle for the month of March in 1876 there were more than fifteen deaths reported, mostly of children under five. The Mayor, in an explanation as to the cause put it down to the recent severe weather!
So how significant were these local epidemics, well, In Stoke there were 425 children absent from school at one period because of the sickness the following month and in August there was a major epidemic in Burslem. Here, twenty-three children under the age of five died of measles, and yet only one boy unvaccinated died of smallpox proving the value of vaccination. That’s how serious measles was, and yet despite the facts, today 2024 some parents remain reluctant to have their children immunised.
The article covers the area of Burslem as a typical industrial town and how it related to the disease and the consequences. Great piece of study to assist students of health in the potteries.

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