Public Health
Dublin Core
Title
Public Health
Subject
Poverty and public health in Belfast, 1888-1914
Description
Diseases such as cholera, typhus, measles, whooping cough and tuberculosis were exacerbated by the environmental problems of the industrial city, and were a constant threat to the city’s inhabitants. Infants were particularly vulnerable and infant mortality rates were high.
Local authorities including Belfast Corporation were tasked with public health reform. In the early twentieth century, public health began to focus on education and personal hygiene. Public health and sanitary officials and voluntary groups such as the Women’s National Health Association undertook health campaigns and visited the homes for the working classes.
While public health provision in the nineteenth and early twentieth century is credited with reducing mortality rates, it is also criticised for failing to address social and economic inequalities which caused much ill health, placing too much responsibility on personal prevention and sanitary issues such as sewage.
The workhouse hospital, now Belfast City Hospital, was an important source of medical welfare for the city’s poor and struggled to cope with the large numbers admitted. On one day in May 1898 there were 1,882 patients in the infirmary which was described as ‘dangerously overcrowded’. It was becoming increasingly professionalised, however, treating an increasing range of conditions, training nurses and providing training for medical students from Queen’s University Belfast. Poor law officials even took people who had been bitten by dogs to the Pasteur Institute in Paris to be treated for rabies.
Local authorities including Belfast Corporation were tasked with public health reform. In the early twentieth century, public health began to focus on education and personal hygiene. Public health and sanitary officials and voluntary groups such as the Women’s National Health Association undertook health campaigns and visited the homes for the working classes.
While public health provision in the nineteenth and early twentieth century is credited with reducing mortality rates, it is also criticised for failing to address social and economic inequalities which caused much ill health, placing too much responsibility on personal prevention and sanitary issues such as sewage.
The workhouse hospital, now Belfast City Hospital, was an important source of medical welfare for the city’s poor and struggled to cope with the large numbers admitted. On one day in May 1898 there were 1,882 patients in the infirmary which was described as ‘dangerously overcrowded’. It was becoming increasingly professionalised, however, treating an increasing range of conditions, training nurses and providing training for medical students from Queen’s University Belfast. Poor law officials even took people who had been bitten by dogs to the Pasteur Institute in Paris to be treated for rabies.
Source
Photograph of Hemsworth Street, Belfast, 1912 by Alexander Hogg. [PRONI LA/7/8/HF/3]
Extract from the Report of the Health of Belfast, 1914. [PRONI LA/7/9/DA/22]
Title page of the Belfast Health Journal, 1905. [PRONI D2682/2/19]
PRONI Extract from the Report on the Health of Belfast, 1909. [PRONI D2682/2/19]
Extract from the Report of the Health of Belfast, 1914. [PRONI LA/7/9/DA/22]
Title page of the Belfast Health Journal, 1905. [PRONI D2682/2/19]
PRONI Extract from the Report on the Health of Belfast, 1909. [PRONI D2682/2/19]
Date
1909-01-01
1912-01-01
Rights
Reproduction of these materials in any format for any purpose other than personal research and study may constitute a violation of CDPA 1988 and infringement of rights associated with the materials. Queen’s University Belfast does not own copyright in this material. Please contact us for permissions information at specialcollections@qub.ac.uk
Format
jpeg
Language
English
Still Image Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Photo
Files
Citation
“Public Health,” Digital Exhibitions at Special Collections & Archives, Queen's University Belfast, accessed November 24, 2024, https://omeka.qub.ac.uk/items/show/145.
Geolocation
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