About This Book
The author reviews the spread of cholera and compiles clinical and epidemiological evidence to explain its transmission. He presents case studies documenting person-to-person spread and argues against airborne effluvia, using pathological and fluid analyses to show the morbid agent enters the alimentary canal. Multiple outbreak investigations link localized epidemics to polluted water sources, supported by maps, tables, and comparative mortality data across different water supplies, institutions, and neighborhoods. The work assesses environmental and infrastructural factors such as water-company networks, river contamination, elevation, and dry weather that alter exposure risk.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
A Brief History of Forestry. / In Europe, the United States and Other Countries
by B. E. Fernow
A Distributional Study of the Amphibians of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, México
by William Edward Duellman
A Full Description of the Great Tornado in Chester County, Pa.
by Richard Darlington
A Guide to the Mount's Bay and the Land's End / Comprehending the topography, botany, agriculture, fisheries, antiquities, mining, mineralogy and geology of West Cornwall
by John Ayrton Paris
A History of Epidemic Pestilences / From the Earliest Ages, 1495 Years Before the Birth of our Saviour to 1848: With Researches into Their Nature, Causes, and Prophylaxis
by Edward Bascome
A History of Southern Utah and Its National Parks (Revised)
by Angus M. Woodbury
