1937 Croydon typhoid outbreak
Disease outbreak in England / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Croydon typhoid outbreak of 1937, also known as the Croydon epidemic of typhoid fever,[1] was an outbreak of typhoid fever in Croydon, Surrey, now part of London, in 1937. It resulted in 341 cases of typhoid (43 fatal), and it caused considerable local discontent leading to a media campaign and a public inquiry.
Date | October 1937 (October 1937)–December 1937 (December 1937) |
---|---|
Location | Croydon |
Cause | Typhoid fever |
Outcome | 341 cases |
Deaths | 43 |
Litigation | Read v. Croydon Corporation (1938) |
The source of the illness remained a mystery until the cases were mapped out using epidemiological method. The origin was found to be the polluted chalk water well at Addington, London, which supplied water to up to one-fifth of the area that is now the London Borough of Croydon. Coupled with issues around the co-operation between the medical officers and the administrators of the Borough, three coincidental events were blamed; changes to the well structure by repair work, the employment of a new workman who was an unwitting carrier of typhoid, and failure to chlorinate the water.