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Snow’s work on
cholera demonstrated fundamental intellectual steps that must be part of
every epidemiological investigation. He began with a logical analysis of the
available facts, which proved that cholera could not be caused by a ‘miasma’
(emanations from rotting organic matter) as proposed in a theory popular at
that time; but must be caused by a transmissible agent, most probably in
drinking water. He confirmed the proof with two epidemiological
investigations in the great cholera epidemic of 1854. He studied a severe
localized epidemic in Soho, using analysis of descriptive epidemiological
data and spot maps to demonstrate that the cause was polluted water from a
pump in Broad Street. His investigation of the more widespread epidemic in
South London involved an inquiry into the source of drinking water used in
over 700 households. He compared the water source in houses where cholera
had occurred with that in others where it had not. His analysis of the
information about cases and their sources of drinking-water, showed beyond
doubt that the cause was water that was being supplied to houses by the
Southwark and Vauxhall water company, which drew its water from the Thames
down-river, where many effluent discharges polluted the water. Very few
cases occurred in households supplied with water by the Lambeth company
which collected water upstream from London, where there was little or no
pollution.
This was a remarkable feat, completed 30 years before Robert Koch
identified the cholera bacillus. Snow published his work in a monograph,
On the Mode of Communication of Cholera (1855). This book has been
reprinted in modern editions and is still used as a teaching text.
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