|
John Graunt
(1620-1674) a London merchant haberdasher, was an amateur scientist, an
early Fellow of the Royal Society. He was interested in the impact of
epidemics, especially the plague, and how plague caused the numbers of
deaths, and the age at death, to vary from one year to another. For over 100
years before his time, parishes had kept records of baptisms and deaths, and
what was then understood about causes of death was inscribed in the Bills of
Mortality. Graunt collected and analyzed these Bills of Mortality. He
demonstrated differences between males and females, between London and rural
areas, and the ebb and flow of epidemics of plague. He published his work in
Natural and Political Observations ... upon the Bills of Mortality
(London, 1662). This was the foundation for the science of vital statistics.
John Graunt demonstrated the importance of gathering facts in a systematic
manner, to identify, characterize and classify health conditions of public
health importance. |