Department of General Practice, University of Western Australia
Correspondence to: 328 Stirling Highway, Claremont, Western Australia E-mail: bobmoor{at}uwa.edu.au
| INTRODUCTION |
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| OBSERVATIONS IN THE TAW VALLEY |
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At first the people involved did not seem to have connections. However the fourth case, a sawyer, removed to his home nine miles off, soon as he began to droop. Two days after his return home he was laid up with fever of which he died at the end of 5 weeks. Ten days after his death his two children were also laid up with fever and both had it severely. The widow remained well.
Budd continued,
The case of the other sawyer (the sixth of the epidemic) who left the village when he felt the first symptoms of fever and went through the disease at his own home nearly nine miles off, is still more instructive. A friend who visited this man when he was at his worst, and was called upon to assist him in the bed,.... at the end of 10 days was seized with rigor which was followed by typhoid fever of long duration.... This person now became a new source of contagion. Before he was convalescent, two of his children were laid up with fever, and also a brother, living at some distance, but who had repeatedly visited him4.
In 1839 Budd unsuccessfully submitted an essay that included this information to a medical competition. It was titled The investigation of the sources of the common continued fevers of Great Britain and Ireland, and the ascertaining of the circumstances which may have a tendency to render them communicable from one person to another.
| THE BRISTOL YEARS |
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It was not until 1859 that Budd's observations on typhoid in the Taw Valley finally emerged in The Lancet, under the title On Intestinal Fever5. Much of the support for his notion of person-to-person spread came from fellow country doctors. One of these, William Cook from Worcester, described in The Lancet how he had traced a little epidemic in a country place where the houses are widely apart very similar to the North Tawton one of 1839 and argued that such cases were not at all rare6. Another country doctor reported tracing an epidemic from a girl's school into homes in his practice and from the children through the families7. The battle lines were now drawn, between the contagionists, who believed in person-to person spread, and the anticontagonists, who favoured the notion of miasmaacquisition of disease via bad air or bad drainage. Budd concluded,
If my own experience in this matter may be trusted, the immense majority of country practitioners are, as regards the species of fever, decided contagionists. I believe that it is also true that an equally large majority of those who practise in large towns, and in London especially, as chief of large towns, are as decided anticontagionists. And if the former should prove to be right, the credit must no doubt be given, not to superior insight on their part but to their possession of a better point of view4.
In the summer of 1863 enteric (typhoid) fever broke out at the Convent of the Good Shepherd in Arno's Court, near Bristol. This incident was described in Budd's later work Typhoid Fever, and its reviewer in the British Medical Journal noted that Budd recorded that a previous inmate of the reformatory had reattended, after several months in a town twenty miles away, with the fever upon her. Six weeks after her return the first case of enteric fever occurred in the convent and by March more than fifty of the inmates had been stricken, three had already died, and two more, including the chaplin, were lying at the point of death. Budd maintained that the outbreak, in an establishment in which hitherto no single case of typhoid fever had ever occurred, gave the lie to the doctrine that typhoid fever is the result of bad drainage only, and is not in any way contagious8. He also recorded, in The Lancet, his views about an outbreak of fever at the Clergy Orphan School, in St John's Wood, London. In this outbreak necropsies had shown the characteristic intestinal ulcerations of typhoid fever. He wrote If it be certain that the intestinal discharges of this fever are the principal means of propagating the disease, it is no less certain that by subjecting the discharge on their issue from the body to the action of powerful disinfectants, they may be deprived of this property9.
| A PREVENTIVE STRATEGY |
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| THE OPPOSITION |
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Budd had the ill luck to find himself chronologically between two epidemiological paradigmsthe era of sanitary statistics with its paradigm, miasma, and the era of infectious disease epidemiology with its germ theory12. In the early years miasma prevailed, and in 1848, when cholera revisited London, the London Metropolitan Commission, dominated by Edwin Chadwick, was confident that the disease spread through the gases rising from putrid matter rather than by contagion or infected water. The Commission therefore organized the flushing of the public sewers into the Thames, which made the epidemic worse by contaminating the drinking water. The Corporation then appointed London's first Medical Officer of Health, John Simon. When cholera returned in 1854, very few of those who died were dwellers in the City. This was because Simon had cleaned up the City, whose water supply no longer came from the Thames.
Simon was influenced by research done by William Budd, on cholera in Bristol, and by John Snow who (it seems independently) in 1849 had suggested that cholera was spread by the swallowing of its living organism in drinking water. In 1854 Snow found that most of the 500 people who died in Soho from the cholera took their water from the famous Broad (now Broadhurst) Street pump while users of the local wells escaped. Once the pump was sealed off the outbreak subsided. Simon did a larger study comparing water supplies from Dutton and Battersea and obtained similar results13.
Budd's main work, Typhoid Fever, was published in 1873 long after his original rural observations in North Tawton. In it he declared that the sewer has been looked upon as the actual and primary source of the disease, while the infected man has been altogether lost sight of. The British Medical Journal reviewer was impressed by the story of the two sawyers with typhoid in North Tawton and the girl returning to St Arno's convent. However, this commentary also noted the view of Dr Charles Murchison at the time, that many cases had had an independent origin. Another criticism was that no one had found the genesis of epidemics of enteric fever. The reviewer quoted Dr Maclagan of Dundee who believed that enteric fever occurred spontaneously. An epidemic in an isolated farmhouse was attributed to altered positioning of a drain, because the possibility of importation of the disease seemed excluded: all the servants and residents had been there for some months at least: no one had been in any locality in which the fever existed, and no one had visited the place who was in the least degree likely to have brought the infection with them. The concept of the symptom-free carrier had clearly not dawned on anyone, Budd included. The conclusion of the reviewer was that though we hesitate to subscribe to the whole of Dr. Budd's proposition, we think he has proved that enteric fever sometimes arises from contagion.8
| BUDD'S ACHIEVEMENT |
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| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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G C Cook William Budd and typhoid fever J R Soc Med, January 1, 2003; 96(1): 54 - 54. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M S B Vaile William Budd and typhoid fever J R Soc Med, January 1, 2003; 96(1): 53 - 54. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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