The changing assessments of John Snow's and William Farr's cholera studies

被引:28
作者
Eyler, JM [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Program Hist Med, Dept Hist Med, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
来源
SOZIAL-UND PRAVENTIVMEDIZIN | 2001年 / 46卷 / 04期
关键词
history; epidemiology; cholera; water; elevation; John Snow;
D O I
10.1007/BF01593177
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
This article describes the epidemiological studies of cholera by two major British investigators of the mid-nineteenth century, John Snow and William Farr, and it asks why the assessments of their results by contemporaries was the reverse of our assessment today. In the 1840s and 1850s Farr's work was considered definitive, while Snow's was regarded as ingenious but flawed. Although Snow's conclusions ran contrary to the exceptations of his contemporaries, the major reservations about his cholera studies concerned his bold use of analogy, his thoroughgoing reductionism, and his willingness to ignore what seemed to be contrary evidence. Farr's electic use of current theories, his reliance multiple causation, and his discovery of a mathematical law to describe the outbreak in London in 1849 was much more convincing to his contemporaries. A major change in thinking about disease causation was needed before Snow's work could be widely accepted. William Farr's later studies contributed to that acceptance.
引用
收藏
页码:225 / 232
页数:8
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1855, MODE COMMUNICATION C
[2]  
BROWN P E, 1961, Bull Hist Med, V35, P519
[3]  
BROWN PE, 1964, ANESTH ANALG, V43, P646
[4]  
Budd W., 1849, Malignant cholera: its mode of propagation and its prevention
[5]  
CHAVE SPW, 1958, MED HIST, V2, P97
[6]  
*COMM SCI INQ, 1954, B B P, V21, P48
[7]  
CRELLIN JK, 1968, P 6 BRIT C HIST MED, P57
[8]  
DUCAN W, 1852, J STAT SOC LOND, V15, P183
[9]  
EYLER J M, 1973, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, V28, P79
[10]  
Eyler J.M., 1979, VICTORIAN SOCIAL MED