fbpx
Wikipedia

Miasma theory

The miasma theory (also called the miasmatic theory) is an obsolete medical theory that held that diseases—such as cholera, chlamydia, or the Black Death—were caused by a miasma (μίασμα, Ancient Greek for 'pollution'), a noxious form of "bad air", also known as night air. The theory held that epidemics were caused by miasma, emanating from rotting organic matter.[1] Though miasma theory is typically associated with the spread of contagious diseases, some academics in the early nineteenth century suggested that the theory extended to other conditions as well, e.g. one could become obese by inhaling the odor of food.[2]

An 1831 color lithograph by Robert Seymour depicts cholera as a robed, skeletal creature emanating a deadly black cloud.

The miasma theory was advanced by Hippocrates in the fourth century B.C.[3] and accepted from ancient times in Europe and China. The theory was eventually abandoned by scientists and physicians after 1880, replaced by the germ theory of disease: specific germs, not miasma, caused specific diseases. However, cultural beliefs about getting rid of odor made the clean-up of waste a high priority for cities.[4][5]

Etymology

The word miasma comes from ancient Greek and means 'pollution'.[6] The idea also gave rise to the name malaria (literally 'bad air') through medieval Italian.

Views worldwide

 
Book of Sebastian Petrycy published in Kraków in 1613 about prevention against "bad air".

Miasma was considered to be a poisonous vapor or mist filled with particles from decomposed matter (miasmata) that caused illnesses. The miasmatic position was that diseases were the product of environmental factors such as contaminated water, foul air, and poor hygienic conditions. Such infection was not passed between individuals but would affect individuals within the locale that gave rise to such vapors. It was identifiable by its foul smell. It was also initially believed that miasmas were propagated through worms from ulcers within those affected by a plague.[7]

Europe

In the fifth or fourth century BC, Hippocrates wrote about the effects of the environs over the human diseases:

Whoever wishes to investigate medicine properly, should proceed thus: in the first place to consider the seasons of the year, and what effects each of them produces for they are not at all alike, but differ much from themselves in regard to their changes. Then the winds, the hot and the cold, especially such as are common to all countries, and then such as are peculiar to each locality. We must also consider the qualities of the waters, for as they differ from one another in taste and weight, so also do they differ much in their qualities. In the same manner, when one comes into a city to which he is a stranger, he ought to consider its situation, how it lies as to the winds and the rising of the sun; for its influence is not the same whether it lies to the north or the south, to the rising or to the setting sun. These things one ought to consider most attentively, and concerning the waters which the inhabitants use, whether they be marshy and soft, or hard, and running from elevated and rocky situations, and then if saltish and unfit for cooking; and the ground, whether it be naked and deficient in water, or wooded and well watered, and whether it lies in a hollow, confined situation, or is elevated and cold; and the mode in which the inhabitants live, and what are their pursuits, whether they are fond of drinking and eating to excess, and given to indolence, or are fond of exercise and labor, and not given to excess in eating and drinking.[8]

In the 1st century BC, the Roman architectural writer Vitruvius described the potential effects of miasma (Latin nebula) from fetid swamplands when visiting a city:

For when the morning breezes blow toward the town at sunrise, if they bring with them mist from marshes and, mingled with the mist, the poisonous breath of creatures of the marshes to be wafted into the bodies of the inhabitants, they will make the site unhealthy.[9]

The miasmatic theory of disease remained popular in the Middle Ages and a sense of effluvia contributed to Robert Boyle's Suspicions about the Hidden Realities of the Air.

In the 1850s, miasma was used to explain the spread of cholera in London and in Paris, partly justifying Haussmann's later renovation of the French capital. The disease was said to be preventable by cleansing and scouring of the body and items. Dr. William Farr, the assistant commissioner for the 1851 London census, was an important supporter of the miasma theory. He believed that cholera was transmitted by air, and that there was a deadly concentration of miasmata near the River Thames' banks. Such a belief was in part accepted because of the general lack of air quality in urbanized areas.[2] The wide acceptance of miasma theory during the cholera outbreaks overshadowed the partially correct theory brought forth by John Snow that cholera was spread through water. This slowed the response to the major outbreaks in the Soho district of London and other areas. The Crimean War nurse Florence Nightingale (1820–1910)[10][11][12] was a proponent of the theory and worked to make hospitals sanitary and fresh-smelling. It was stated in 'Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes' (1860) that Nightingale would "keep the air [the patient] breathes as pure as the external air."[13]

Fear of miasma registered in many early nineteenth-century warnings concerning what was termed "unhealthy fog". The presence of fog was thought to strongly indicate the presence of miasma. The miasmas were thought to behave like smoke or mist, blown with air currents, wafted by winds. It was thought that miasma didn't simply travel on air but changed the air through which it propagated; the atmosphere was infected by miasma, as diseased people were.[14]

China

In China, miasma (Chinese: 瘴氣; pinyin: Zhàngqì; alternative names 瘴毒, 瘴癘) is an old concept of illness, used extensively by ancient Chinese local chronicles and works of literature. Miasma has different names in Chinese culture. Most of the explanations of miasma refer to it as a kind of sickness, or poison gas.

The ancient Chinese thought that miasma was related to the environment of parts of Southern China. The miasma was thought to be caused by the heat, moisture and the dead air in the Southern Chinese mountains. They thought that insects' waste polluted the air, the fog, and the water, and the virgin forest harbored a great environment for miasma to occur.

In descriptions by ancient travelers, soldiers, or local officials (most of them are men of letters) of the phenomenon of miasma, fog, haze, dust, gas, or poison geological gassing were always mentioned. The miasma was thought to have caused a lot of diseases such as the cold, influenza, heat strokes, malaria, or dysentery. In the medical history of China, malaria had been referred to by different names in different dynasty periods. Poisoning and psittacosis were also called miasma in ancient China because they did not accurately understand the cause of disease.

In the Sui dynasty, doctor Chao Yuanfang mentioned miasma in his book On Pathogen and Syndromes (諸病源候論). He thought that miasma in Southern China was similar to typhoid fever in Northern China. However, in his opinion, miasma was different from malaria and dysentery. In his book, he discussed dysentery in another chapter, and malaria in a single chapter. He also claimed that miasma caused various diseases, so he suggested that one should find apt and specific ways to resolve problems.[15]

The concept of miasma developed in several stages. First, before the Western Jin dynasty, the concept of miasma was gradually forming; at least, in the Eastern Han dynasty, there was no description of miasma. During the Eastern Jin, large numbers of northern people moved south, and miasma was then recognized by men of letters and nobility. After the Sui and the Tang dynasty, scholars-bureaucrats sent to be the local officials recorded and investigated miasma. As a result, the government became concerned about the severe cases and the causes of miasma by sending doctors to the areas of epidemic to research the disease and heal the patients. In the Ming dynasty and Qing dynasty, versions of local chronicles record different miasma in different places.[16]

However, Southern China was highly developed in the Ming and Qing dynasties. The environment changed rapidly, and after the 19th century, western science and medical knowledge were introduced into China, and people knew how to distinguish and deal with the disease. The concept of miasma therefore faded out due to the progress of medicine in China.[17]

Influence in Southern China

The terrifying miasma diseases in the southern regions of China made it the primary location for relegating officials and sending criminals to exile since the Qin-Han Dynasty. Poet Han Yu (韓愈) of the Tang dynasty, for example, wrote to his nephew who came to see him off after his banishment to the Chao Prefecture in his poem, En Route[18] (左遷至藍關示姪孫湘):

At dawn I sent a single warning to the throne of the Nine Steps;
At evening I was banished to Chao Yang, eight thousand leagues.
Striving on behalf of a noble dynasty to expel an ignoble government,
How should I, withered and worn, deplore my future lot?
The clouds gather on Ch'in Mountains, I cannot see my home;
The snow bars the passes of Lan, my horse cannot go forward.
But I know that you will come from afar, to fulfil your set purpose,

And lovingly gather my bones, on the banks of that plague-stricken river.

The prevalent belief and predominant fear of the southern region with its "poisonous air and gases" is evident in historical documents.

Similar topics and feelings toward the miasma-infected south are often reflected in early Chinese poetry and records. Most scholars of the time agreed that the geological environments in the south had a direct impact on the population composition and growth. Many historical records reflect that females were less prone to miasma infection, and mortality rates were much higher in the south, especially for the men. This directly influenced agriculture cultivation and the southern economy, as men were the engine of agriculture production. Zhou Qufei (周去非), a local magistrate from the Southern Song Dynasty described in his treatise, Representative Answers from the South: "... The men are short and tan, while the women were plump and seldom came down with illness,"[19] and exclaimed at the populous female population in the Guangxi region.

This inherent environmental threat also prevented immigration from other regions. Hence, development in the damp and sultry south was much slower than in the north, where the dynasties' political power resided for much of early Chinese history.[20]

India

In India, there was also a miasma theory and the Indians take credit for being the first to put this miasma theory into clinical practice. The Indians invented paan, a gambir paste, that was believed to help prevent miasma; it was considered the first antimiasmatic application. This gambir tree is found in Southern India and Sri Lanka.[21][better source needed]

Developments from 19th century onwards

Zymotic theory

Based on zymotic theory, people believed vapors called miasmata (singular: miasma) rose from the soil and spread diseases. Miasmata were believed to come from rotting vegetation and foul water—especially in swamps and urban ghettos.

Many people, especially the weak or infirm, avoided breathing night air by going indoors and keeping windows and doors shut. In addition to ideas associated with zymotic theory, there was also a general fear that cold or cool air spread disease. The fear of night air gradually disappeared as understanding about disease increased as well as with improvements in home heating and ventilation. Particularly important was the understanding that the agent spreading malaria was the mosquito (active at night) rather than miasmata.[22][23]

Contagionism versus miasmatism

Prior to the late 19th century, night air was considered dangerous in most Western cultures. Throughout the 19th century, the medical community was divided on the explanation for disease proliferation. On one side were the contagionists, believing disease was passed through physical contact, while others believed disease was present in the air in the form of miasma, and thus could proliferate without physical contact. Two members of the latter group were Dr. Thomas S. Smith and Florence Nightingale.

Thomas Southwood Smith spent many years comparing the miasmatic theory to contagionism.

To assume the method of propagation by touch, whether by the person or of infected articles, and to overlook that by the corruption of the air, is at once to increase the real danger, from exposure to noxious effluvia, and to divert attention from the true means of remedy and prevention.

Florence Nightingale:

The idea of "contagion", as explaining the spread of disease, appears to have been adopted at a time when, from the neglect of sanitary arrangements, epidemics attacked whole masses of people, and when men had ceased to consider that nature had any laws for her guidance. Beginning with the poets and historians, the word finally made its way into scientific nomenclature, where it has remained ever since [...] a satisfactory explanation for pestilence and an adequate excuse for non-exertion to prevent its recurrence.

The current germ theory accounts for disease proliferation by both direct and indirect physical contact.[citation needed]

Influence on sanitary engineering reforms

In the early 19th century, the living conditions in industrialized cities in Britain were increasingly unsanitary. The population was growing at a much faster rate than the infrastructure could support. For example, the population of Manchester doubled within a single decade, leading to overcrowding and a significant increase in waste accumulation.[24] The miasma theory of disease made sense to the sanitary reformers of the mid-19th century. Miasmas explained why cholera and other diseases were epidemic in places where the water was stagnant and foul-smelling. A leading sanitary reformer, London's Edwin Chadwick, asserted that "all smell is disease", and maintained that a fundamental change in the structure of sanitation systems was needed to combat increasing urban mortality rates.

Chadwick saw the problem of cholera and typhoid epidemics as being directly related to urbanization, and he proposed that new, independent sewerage systems should be connected to homes. Chadwick supported his proposal with reports from the London Statistical Society which showed dramatic increases in both morbidity and mortality rates since the beginning of urbanization in the early 19th century.[24] Though Chadwick proposed reform on the basis of the miasma theory, his proposals did contribute to improvements in sanitation, such as preventing the reflux of noxious air from sewers back into houses by using separate drainage systems in the design of sanitation. That led, incidentally, to decreased outbreaks of cholera and thus helped to support the theory.[25]

The miasma theory was consistent with the observation that disease was associated with poor sanitation, and hence foul odours, and that sanitary improvements reduced disease. However, it was inconsistent with the findings arising from microbiology and bacteriology in the later 19th century, which eventually led to the adoption of the germ theory of disease, although consensus was not reached immediately. Concerns over sewer gas, which was a major component of the miasma theory developed by Galen, and brought to prominence by the "Great Stink" in London in the summer of 1858, led proponents of the theory to observe that sewers enclosed the refuse of the human bowel, which medical science had discovered could teem with typhoid, cholera, and other microbes.

In 1846, the Nuisances Removal and Diseases Prevention Act[26] was passed to identify whether the transmission of cholera was by air or by water. The act was used to encourage owners to clean their dwellings and connect them to sewers.[citation needed]

Even though eventually disproved by the understanding of bacteria and the discovery of viruses, the miasma theory helped establish the connection between poor sanitation and disease. That encouraged cleanliness and spurred public health reforms which, in Britain, led to the Public Health Acts[26] of 1848 and 1858, and the Local Government Act of 1858. The latter of those enabled the instituting of investigations into the health and sanitary regulations of any town or place, upon the petition of residents or as a result of death rates exceeding the norm. Early medical and sanitary engineering reformers included Henry Austin, Joseph Bazalgette, Edwin Chadwick, Frank Forster, Thomas Hawksley, William Haywood, Henry Letheby, Robert Rawlinson, John Simon, John Snow and Thomas Wicksteed.[27] Their efforts, and associated British regulatory improvements, were reported in the United States as early as 1865.[28]

Particularly notable in 19th century sanitation reform is the work of Joseph Bazalgette, chief engineer to London's Metropolitan Board of Works. Encouraged by the Great Stink, Parliament sanctioned Bazalgette to design and construct a comprehensive system of sewers, which intercepted London's sewage and diverted it away from its water supply. The system helped purify London's water and saved the city from epidemics. In 1866, the last of the three great British cholera epidemics took hold in a small area of Whitechapel. However, the area was not yet connected to Bazalgette's system, and the confined area of the epidemic acted as testament to the efficiency of the system's design.[2]

Years later, the influence of those sanitary reforms on Britain was described by Richard Rogers:[27]

London was the first city to create a complex civic administration which could coordinate modern urban services, from public transport to housing, clean water to education. London's County Council was acknowledged as the most progressive metropolitan government in the world. Fifty years earlier, London had been the worst slum city of the industrialized world: over-crowded, congested, polluted and ridden with disease...

The miasma theory did contribute to containing disease in urban settlements, but did not allow the adoption of a suitable approach to the reuse of excreta in agriculture.[29] It was a major factor in the practice of collecting human excreta from urban settlements and reusing them in the surrounding farmland. That type of resource recovery scheme was common in major cities in the 19th century before the introduction of sewer-based sanitation systems.[30] Nowadays, the reuse of excreta, when done in a hygienic manner, is known as ecological sanitation, and is promoted as a way of "closing the loop".

Throughout the 19th century, concern about public health and sanitation, along with the influence of the miasma theory, were reasons for the advocacy of the then-controversial practice of cremation. If infectious diseases were spread by noxious gases emitted from decaying organic matter, that included decaying corpses. The public health argument for cremation faded with the eclipsing of the miasma theory of disease.[31]

Replacement by germ theory

Although the connection between germ and disease was proposed quite early, it was not until the late 1800s that the germ theory was generally accepted. The miasmatic theory was challenged by John Snow, suggesting that there was some means by which the disease was spread via a poison or morbid material (orig: materies morbi) in the water.[32] He suggested this before and in response to a cholera epidemic on Broad Street in central London in 1854.[33] Because of the miasmatic theory's predominance among Italian scientists, the discovery in the same year by Filippo Pacini of the bacillus that caused the disease was completely ignored. It was not until 1876 that Robert Koch proved that the bacterium Bacillus anthracis caused anthrax,[34] which brought a definitive end to miasma theory.

1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak

The work of John Snow is notable for helping to make the connection between cholera and typhoid epidemics and contaminated water sources, which contributed to the eventual demise of miasma theory. During the cholera epidemic of 1854, Snow traced high mortality rates among the citizens of Soho to a water pump in Broad Street. Snow convinced the local government to remove the pump handle, which resulted in a marked decrease in cases of cholera in the area. In 1857, Snow submitted a paper to the British Medical Journal which attributed high numbers of cholera cases to water sources that were contaminated with human waste. Snow used statistical data to show that citizens who received their water from upstream sources were considerably less likely to develop cholera than those who received their water from downstream sources. Though his research supported his hypothesis that contaminated water, not foul air, was the source of cholera epidemics, a review committee concluded that Snow's findings were not significant enough to warrant change, and they were summarily dismissed. Additionally, other interests intervened in the process of reform. Many water companies and civic authorities pumped water directly from contaminated sources such as the Thames to public wells, and the idea of changing sources or implementing filtration techniques was an unattractive economic prospect. In the face of such economic interests, reform was slow to be adopted.[24]

In 1855, John Snow made a testimony against the Amendment to the "Nuisances Removal and Diseases Prevention Act" that regularized air pollution of some industries. He claimed that:

That is possible; but I believe that the poison of the cholera is either swallowed in water, or got directly from some other person in the family, or in the room; I believe it is quite an exception for it to be conveyed in the air; though if the matter gets dry it may be wafted a short distance.[35]

In the same year, William Farr, who was then the major supporter of the miasma theory, issued a report to criticize the germ theory. Farr and the Committee wrote that:

After careful inquiry, we see no reason to adopt this belief. We do not feel it established that the water was contaminated in the manner alleged; nor is there before us any sufficient evidence to show whether inhabitants of that district, drinking from that well, suffered in proportion more than other inhabitants of the district who drank from other sources.[36][37]

Experiments by Louis Pasteur

The more formal experiments on the relationship between germ and disease were conducted by Louis Pasteur between 1860 and 1864. He discovered the pathology of the puerperal fever[38] and the pyogenic vibrio in the blood, and suggested using boric acid to kill these microorganisms before and after confinement.

By 1866, eight years after the death of John Snow, William Farr publicly acknowledged that the miasma theory on the transmission of cholera was wrong, by his statistical justification on the death rate.[36]

Anthrax

Robert Koch is widely known for his work with anthrax, discovering the causative agent of the fatal disease to be Bacillus anthracis.[39] He published the discovery in a booklet as Die Ätiologie der Milzbrand-Krankheit, Begründet auf die Entwicklungsgeschichte des Bacillus Anthracis (The Etiology of Anthrax Disease, Based on the Developmental History of Bacillus Anthracis) in 1876 while working in Wöllstein.[40] His publication in 1877 on the structure of anthrax bacterium[41] marked the first photography of a bacterium.[24] He discovered the formation of spores in anthrax bacteria, which could remain dormant under specific conditions.[42] However, under optimal conditions, the spores were activated and caused disease.[42] To determine this causative agent, he dry-fixed bacterial cultures onto glass slides, used dyes to stain the cultures, and observed them through a microscope.[43] His work with anthrax is notable in that he was the first to link a specific microorganism with a specific disease, rejecting the idea of spontaneous generation and supporting the germ theory of disease.[39]

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ John M. Last, ed. (2007). miasma theory. A Dictionary of Public Health. Westminster College, Pennsylvania: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516090-1.
  2. ^ a b c Halliday, Stephen (2001). "Death and Miasma in Victorian London: An Obstinate Belief". British Medical Journal. 323 (7327): 1469–1471. doi:10.1136/bmj.323.7327.1469. PMC 1121911. PMID 11751359.
  3. ^ van der Eijk, P.J. (2005). Hippocrates in Context: Papers Read at the XIth International Hippocrates Colloquium (University of Newcastle upon Tyne, 27-31 August 2002). BRILL. p. 17. ISBN 9789004377271. Retrieved March 22, 2021.
  4. ^ Linda Nash, Inescapable Ecologies: A History of Environment, Disease, and Knowledge (2007)
  5. ^ Suellen Hoy, Chasing Dirt: The American Pursuit of Cleanliness (1996) pp. 104–13
  6. ^ "Definition of MIASMA". www.merriam-webster.com. from the original on February 8, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  7. ^ Malouin, Paul-Jacques (1765). "Miasma". Encyclopedia of Diderot & d'Alembert - Collaborative Translation Project. Michigan Publishing, University of Michigan Library. hdl:2027/spo.did2222.0000.369.
  8. ^ Hippocrates. "On Airs, Waters, and Places". Part 1. Retrieved June 1, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  9. ^ Vitruvius, De architectura I.4.1, Latin text at LacusCurtius.
  10. ^ "Brief History During the Snow Era". John Snow Site. UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology. from the original on January 17, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  11. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2009. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  12. ^ (PDF). AS Science for Public Understanding. Teacher Notes. Nuffield Foundation. March 25, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2009. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  13. ^ Nightingale, Florence (1861). Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes. Harrison. p. 7. Retrieved July 25, 2022.
  14. ^ Valenčius, Conevery B. The Health of the Country: How American Settlers Understood Themselves and Their Land. New York: Basic Books, 2002. pp. 115–17. Print.
  15. ^ (隋)巢元方撰,曹赤電炳章圈點,《巢氏諸病源候論》,(台北:國立中國醫藥研究所,1996),頁30、47–51。
  16. ^ 牟重行,王彩萍,〈中國歷史上的「瘴氣」考釋〉,《國立臺灣師範大學地理研究報告》,(第38期,台北:國立臺灣師範大學地理學系,2003),頁25。 "Archived copy". from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved June 13, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ 牟重行,王彩萍,〈中國歷史上的「瘴氣」考釋〉,《國立臺灣師範大學地理研究報告》,(第38期,台北:國立臺灣師範大學地理學系,2003),頁25–26。 "Archived copy". from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved June 13, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  18. ^ [1], Translated by Arthur Waley in Chinese Poems.
  19. ^ "嶺外代答 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆". Archived from the original on March 19, 2012. Retrieved June 14, 2011., 宋周去非, 嶺外代答, 卷十, 276.
  20. ^ 龔勝生,〈2000年來中國瘴病分布變遷的初步研究〉,《地理學報》,第48卷第4期,(西安:陜西師範大學中國歷史地理研究所,1993),頁305–312。
  21. ^ Satti, Jahangir (2009). "Miasma Analysis" – via academia.edu.
  22. ^ Baldwin, Peter C. (2003). "How Night Air Became Good Air, 1776-1930". Environmental History. 8 (3): 412–429. doi:10.2307/3986202. JSTOR 3986202. S2CID 145338136.
  23. ^ Cipolla, Carlo M. Miasmas and disease: Public health and environment in the pre-industrial age. Yale University Press, 1992. ISBN 0-300-04806-8.
  24. ^ a b c d Gill, Geoff (Summer 2000). "Cholera and the fight for public health reform in mid-Victorian England". Historian. London (66): 10. ProQuest 274942422.
  25. ^ Whorton, James (2001). "'The insidious foe'—sewer gas". West. J. Med. 175 (6): 427–428. doi:10.1136/ewjm.175.6.427. PMC 1275984. PMID 11733443.
  26. ^ a b "Sanitary Legislation. No. VII. Nuisances Removal and Diseases Prevention Acts Consolidation and Amendment Bill". Association Medical Journal. 3 (131): 619–621. July 6, 1855. JSTOR 25496511.
  27. ^ a b "Stanford Libraries". Stanford Libraries. from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  28. ^ "European Sanitary Reform; The British Sanitary Legislation". The New York Times. July 31, 1865. Retrieved December 9, 2016.
  29. ^ Bracken, P.; Wachtler, A.; Panesar, A.R.; Lange, J. (March 2007). "The road not taken: how traditional excreta and greywater management may point the way to a sustainable future". Water Science and Technology: Water Supply. 7 (1): 219–227. doi:10.2166/ws.2007.025.
  30. ^ "Market Gardeners Tram Plateway". Victorian Heritage Database. Heritage Council of Victoria. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
  31. ^ "USA." Encyclopedia of Cremation. Surrey: Ashgate Publishing, 2005. Credo Reference. Web. 17 September 2012.
  32. ^ "On Continuous Molecular Changes, More Particularly in Their Relation to Epidemic Diseases". March 1853. from the original on January 10, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2018 – via The John Snow Archive and Research Companion.
  33. ^ "John Snow's Cholera Map Maps". www.york.ac.uk. from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  34. ^ "Robert Koch (1843–1910)". www.sciencemuseum.org.uk. from the original on January 25, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  35. ^ Frerichs, Ralph R. "Snow's Testimony". www.ph.ucla.edu. from the original on June 3, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  36. ^ a b Frerichs, Ralph R. "Competing Theories of Cholera". www.ph.ucla.edu. from the original on October 26, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  37. ^ "Report of the Committee for Scientific Inquiries in Relation to the Cholera-Epidemic of 1854". July 14, 1855. from the original on January 10, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2018 – via The John Snow Archive and Research Companion.
  38. ^ "On the extension of the germ theory to the etiology of certain common diseases". ebooks.adelaide.edu.au. from the original on September 8, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  39. ^ a b "Germ theory of disease." World of Microbiology and Immunology. Ed. Brenda Wilmoth Lerner and K. Lee Lerner. Detroit: Gale, 2007. Biography in Context. Web. 14 April 2013.
  40. ^ Koch, Robert (2010) [1876]. Robert Koch-Institut. "Die Ätiologie der Milzbrand-Krankheit, begründet auf die Entwicklungsgeschichte des Bacillus Anthracis". Cohns Beiträge zur Biologie der Pflanzen (in German). 2 (2): 277 (1–22). doi:10.25646/5064.
  41. ^ Koch, Robert (2010) [1877]. "Verfahren zur Untersuchung, zum Konservieren und Photographieren der Bakterien". Beiträge zur Biologie der Pflanzen (in German). 2: 399–434. doi:10.25646/5065 – via Robert Koch-Institut.
  42. ^ a b "Heinrich Hermann Robert Koch." World of Scientific Discovery. Gale, 2006. Biography in Context. Web. 14 April 2013.
  43. ^ "Robert Koch." World of Microbiology and Immunology. Ed. Brenda Wilmoth Lerner and K. Lee Lerner. Detroit: Gale, 2006. Biography in Context. Web. 14 April 2013.

Further reading

  • Beasley, Brett (September 30, 2015). "Bad Air: Pollution, Sin, and Science Fiction in William Delisle Hay's The Doom of the Great City (1880)". The Public Domain Review. 5 (18).  
  • Sterner, Carl S. (2007). "A Brief History of Miasmic Theory" (PDF). Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 22 (1948): 747.
  • Thorsheim, Peter (2006). Inventing Pollution: Coal, Smoke, and Culture in Britain since 1800. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-8214-1681-5.

External links

  • Prevailing theories before the germ theory
  • Cholera theories
  • Term definition

miasma, theory, night, redirects, here, song, jamie, woon, night, miasma, theory, also, called, miasmatic, theory, obsolete, medical, theory, that, held, that, diseases, such, cholera, chlamydia, black, death, were, caused, miasma, μίασμα, ancient, greek, poll. Night air redirects here For the song by Jamie Woon see Night Air The miasma theory also called the miasmatic theory is an obsolete medical theory that held that diseases such as cholera chlamydia or the Black Death were caused by a miasma miasma Ancient Greek for pollution a noxious form of bad air also known as night air The theory held that epidemics were caused by miasma emanating from rotting organic matter 1 Though miasma theory is typically associated with the spread of contagious diseases some academics in the early nineteenth century suggested that the theory extended to other conditions as well e g one could become obese by inhaling the odor of food 2 An 1831 color lithograph by Robert Seymour depicts cholera as a robed skeletal creature emanating a deadly black cloud The miasma theory was advanced by Hippocrates in the fourth century B C 3 and accepted from ancient times in Europe and China The theory was eventually abandoned by scientists and physicians after 1880 replaced by the germ theory of disease specific germs not miasma caused specific diseases However cultural beliefs about getting rid of odor made the clean up of waste a high priority for cities 4 5 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Views worldwide 2 1 Europe 2 2 China 2 3 Influence in Southern China 2 4 India 3 Developments from 19th century onwards 3 1 Zymotic theory 3 2 Contagionism versus miasmatism 3 3 Influence on sanitary engineering reforms 4 Replacement by germ theory 4 1 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak 4 2 Experiments by Louis Pasteur 4 3 Anthrax 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology EditThe word miasmacomes from ancient Greek and means pollution 6 The idea also gave rise to the name malaria literally bad air through medieval Italian Views worldwide Edit Book of Sebastian Petrycy published in Krakow in 1613 about prevention against bad air Miasma was considered to be a poisonous vapor or mist filled with particles from decomposed matter miasmata that caused illnesses The miasmatic position was that diseases were the product of environmental factors such as contaminated water foul air and poor hygienic conditions Such infection was not passed between individuals but would affect individuals within the locale that gave rise to such vapors It was identifiable by its foul smell It was also initially believed that miasmas were propagated through worms from ulcers within those affected by a plague 7 Europe Edit In the fifth or fourth century BC Hippocrates wrote about the effects of the environs over the human diseases Whoever wishes to investigate medicine properly should proceed thus in the first place to consider the seasons of the year and what effects each of them produces for they are not at all alike but differ much from themselves in regard to their changes Then the winds the hot and the cold especially such as are common to all countries and then such as are peculiar to each locality We must also consider the qualities of the waters for as they differ from one another in taste and weight so also do they differ much in their qualities In the same manner when one comes into a city to which he is a stranger he ought to consider its situation how it lies as to the winds and the rising of the sun for its influence is not the same whether it lies to the north or the south to the rising or to the setting sun These things one ought to consider most attentively and concerning the waters which the inhabitants use whether they be marshy and soft or hard and running from elevated and rocky situations and then if saltish and unfit for cooking and the ground whether it be naked and deficient in water or wooded and well watered and whether it lies in a hollow confined situation or is elevated and cold and the mode in which the inhabitants live and what are their pursuits whether they are fond of drinking and eating to excess and given to indolence or are fond of exercise and labor and not given to excess in eating and drinking 8 In the 1st century BC the Roman architectural writer Vitruvius described the potential effects of miasma Latin nebula from fetid swamplands when visiting a city For when the morning breezes blow toward the town at sunrise if they bring with them mist from marshes and mingled with the mist the poisonous breath of creatures of the marshes to be wafted into the bodies of the inhabitants they will make the site unhealthy 9 The miasmatic theory of disease remained popular in the Middle Ages and a sense of effluvia contributed to Robert Boyle s Suspicions about the Hidden Realities of the Air In the 1850s miasma was used to explain the spread of cholera in London and in Paris partly justifying Haussmann s later renovation of the French capital The disease was said to be preventable by cleansing and scouring of the body and items Dr William Farr the assistant commissioner for the 1851 London census was an important supporter of the miasma theory He believed that cholera was transmitted by air and that there was a deadly concentration of miasmata near the River Thames banks Such a belief was in part accepted because of the general lack of air quality in urbanized areas 2 The wide acceptance of miasma theory during the cholera outbreaks overshadowed the partially correct theory brought forth by John Snow that cholera was spread through water This slowed the response to the major outbreaks in the Soho district of London and other areas The Crimean War nurse Florence Nightingale 1820 1910 10 11 12 was a proponent of the theory and worked to make hospitals sanitary and fresh smelling It was stated in Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes 1860 that Nightingale would keep the air the patient breathes as pure as the external air 13 Fear of miasma registered in many early nineteenth century warnings concerning what was termed unhealthy fog The presence of fog was thought to strongly indicate the presence of miasma The miasmas were thought to behave like smoke or mist blown with air currents wafted by winds It was thought that miasma didn t simply travel on air but changed the air through which it propagated the atmosphere was infected by miasma as diseased people were 14 China Edit In China miasma Chinese 瘴氣 pinyin Zhangqi alternative names 瘴毒 瘴癘 is an old concept of illness used extensively by ancient Chinese local chronicles and works of literature Miasma has different names in Chinese culture Most of the explanations of miasma refer to it as a kind of sickness or poison gas The ancient Chinese thought that miasma was related to the environment of parts of Southern China The miasma was thought to be caused by the heat moisture and the dead air in the Southern Chinese mountains They thought that insects waste polluted the air the fog and the water and the virgin forest harbored a great environment for miasma to occur In descriptions by ancient travelers soldiers or local officials most of them are men of letters of the phenomenon of miasma fog haze dust gas or poison geological gassing were always mentioned The miasma was thought to have caused a lot of diseases such as the cold influenza heat strokes malaria or dysentery In the medical history of China malaria had been referred to by different names in different dynasty periods Poisoning and psittacosis were also called miasma in ancient China because they did not accurately understand the cause of disease In the Sui dynasty doctor Chao Yuanfang mentioned miasma in his book On Pathogen and Syndromes 諸病源候論 He thought that miasma in Southern China was similar to typhoid fever in Northern China However in his opinion miasma was different from malaria and dysentery In his book he discussed dysentery in another chapter and malaria in a single chapter He also claimed that miasma caused various diseases so he suggested that one should find apt and specific ways to resolve problems 15 The concept of miasma developed in several stages First before the Western Jin dynasty the concept of miasma was gradually forming at least in the Eastern Han dynasty there was no description of miasma During the Eastern Jin large numbers of northern people moved south and miasma was then recognized by men of letters and nobility After the Sui and the Tang dynasty scholars bureaucrats sent to be the local officials recorded and investigated miasma As a result the government became concerned about the severe cases and the causes of miasma by sending doctors to the areas of epidemic to research the disease and heal the patients In the Ming dynasty and Qing dynasty versions of local chronicles record different miasma in different places 16 However Southern China was highly developed in the Ming and Qing dynasties The environment changed rapidly and after the 19th century western science and medical knowledge were introduced into China and people knew how to distinguish and deal with the disease The concept of miasma therefore faded out due to the progress of medicine in China 17 Influence in Southern China Edit The terrifying miasma diseases in the southern regions of China made it the primary location for relegating officials and sending criminals to exile since the Qin Han Dynasty Poet Han Yu 韓愈 of the Tang dynasty for example wrote to his nephew who came to see him off after his banishment to the Chao Prefecture in his poem En Route 18 左遷至藍關示姪孫湘 At dawn I sent a single warning to the throne of the Nine Steps At evening I was banished to Chao Yang eight thousand leagues Striving on behalf of a noble dynasty to expel an ignoble government How should I withered and worn deplore my future lot The clouds gather on Ch in Mountains I cannot see my home The snow bars the passes of Lan my horse cannot go forward But I know that you will come from afar to fulfil your set purpose And lovingly gather my bones on the banks of that plague stricken river The prevalent belief and predominant fear of the southern region with its poisonous air and gases is evident in historical documents Similar topics and feelings toward the miasma infected south are often reflected in early Chinese poetry and records Most scholars of the time agreed that the geological environments in the south had a direct impact on the population composition and growth Many historical records reflect that females were less prone to miasma infection and mortality rates were much higher in the south especially for the men This directly influenced agriculture cultivation and the southern economy as men were the engine of agriculture production Zhou Qufei 周去非 a local magistrate from the Southern Song Dynasty described in his treatise Representative Answers from the South The men are short and tan while the women were plump and seldom came down with illness 19 and exclaimed at the populous female population in the Guangxi region This inherent environmental threat also prevented immigration from other regions Hence development in the damp and sultry south was much slower than in the north where the dynasties political power resided for much of early Chinese history 20 India Edit In India there was also a miasma theory and the Indians take credit for being the first to put this miasma theory into clinical practice The Indians invented paan a gambir paste that was believed to help prevent miasma it was considered the first antimiasmatic application This gambir tree is found in Southern India and Sri Lanka 21 better source needed Developments from 19th century onwards EditZymotic theory Edit Based on zymotic theory people believed vapors called miasmata singular miasma rose from the soil and spread diseases Miasmata were believed to come from rotting vegetation and foul water especially in swamps and urban ghettos Many people especially the weak or infirm avoided breathing night air by going indoors and keeping windows and doors shut In addition to ideas associated with zymotic theory there was also a general fear that cold or cool air spread disease The fear of night air gradually disappeared as understanding about disease increased as well as with improvements in home heating and ventilation Particularly important was the understanding that the agent spreading malaria was the mosquito active at night rather than miasmata 22 23 Contagionism versus miasmatism Edit Prior to the late 19th century night air was considered dangerous in most Western cultures Throughout the 19th century the medical community was divided on the explanation for disease proliferation On one side were the contagionists believing disease was passed through physical contact while others believed disease was present in the air in the form of miasma and thus could proliferate without physical contact Two members of the latter group were Dr Thomas S Smith and Florence Nightingale Thomas Southwood Smith spent many years comparing the miasmatic theory to contagionism To assume the method of propagation by touch whether by the person or of infected articles and to overlook that by the corruption of the air is at once to increase the real danger from exposure to noxious effluvia and to divert attention from the true means of remedy and prevention Florence Nightingale The idea of contagion as explaining the spread of disease appears to have been adopted at a time when from the neglect of sanitary arrangements epidemics attacked whole masses of people and when men had ceased to consider that nature had any laws for her guidance Beginning with the poets and historians the word finally made its way into scientific nomenclature where it has remained ever since a satisfactory explanation for pestilence and an adequate excuse for non exertion to prevent its recurrence The current germ theory accounts for disease proliferation by both direct and indirect physical contact citation needed Influence on sanitary engineering reforms Edit Main article Sanitary movement In the early 19th century the living conditions in industrialized cities in Britain were increasingly unsanitary The population was growing at a much faster rate than the infrastructure could support For example the population of Manchester doubled within a single decade leading to overcrowding and a significant increase in waste accumulation 24 The miasma theory of disease made sense to the sanitary reformers of the mid 19th century Miasmas explained why cholera and other diseases were epidemic in places where the water was stagnant and foul smelling A leading sanitary reformer London s Edwin Chadwick asserted that all smell is disease and maintained that a fundamental change in the structure of sanitation systems was needed to combat increasing urban mortality rates Chadwick saw the problem of cholera and typhoid epidemics as being directly related to urbanization and he proposed that new independent sewerage systems should be connected to homes Chadwick supported his proposal with reports from the London Statistical Society which showed dramatic increases in both morbidity and mortality rates since the beginning of urbanization in the early 19th century 24 Though Chadwick proposed reform on the basis of the miasma theory his proposals did contribute to improvements in sanitation such as preventing the reflux of noxious air from sewers back into houses by using separate drainage systems in the design of sanitation That led incidentally to decreased outbreaks of cholera and thus helped to support the theory 25 The miasma theory was consistent with the observation that disease was associated with poor sanitation and hence foul odours and that sanitary improvements reduced disease However it was inconsistent with the findings arising from microbiology and bacteriology in the later 19th century which eventually led to the adoption of the germ theory of disease although consensus was not reached immediately Concerns over sewer gas which was a major component of the miasma theory developed by Galen and brought to prominence by the Great Stink in London in the summer of 1858 led proponents of the theory to observe that sewers enclosed the refuse of the human bowel which medical science had discovered could teem with typhoid cholera and other microbes In 1846 the Nuisances Removal and Diseases Prevention Act 26 was passed to identify whether the transmission of cholera was by air or by water The act was used to encourage owners to clean their dwellings and connect them to sewers citation needed Even though eventually disproved by the understanding of bacteria and the discovery of viruses the miasma theory helped establish the connection between poor sanitation and disease That encouraged cleanliness and spurred public health reforms which in Britain led to the Public Health Acts 26 of 1848 and 1858 and the Local Government Act of 1858 The latter of those enabled the instituting of investigations into the health and sanitary regulations of any town or place upon the petition of residents or as a result of death rates exceeding the norm Early medical and sanitary engineering reformers included Henry Austin Joseph Bazalgette Edwin Chadwick Frank Forster Thomas Hawksley William Haywood Henry Letheby Robert Rawlinson John Simon John Snow and Thomas Wicksteed 27 Their efforts and associated British regulatory improvements were reported in the United States as early as 1865 28 Particularly notable in 19th century sanitation reform is the work of Joseph Bazalgette chief engineer to London s Metropolitan Board of Works Encouraged by the Great Stink Parliament sanctioned Bazalgette to design and construct a comprehensive system of sewers which intercepted London s sewage and diverted it away from its water supply The system helped purify London s water and saved the city from epidemics In 1866 the last of the three great British cholera epidemics took hold in a small area of Whitechapel However the area was not yet connected to Bazalgette s system and the confined area of the epidemic acted as testament to the efficiency of the system s design 2 Years later the influence of those sanitary reforms on Britain was described by Richard Rogers 27 London was the first city to create a complex civic administration which could coordinate modern urban services from public transport to housing clean water to education London s County Council was acknowledged as the most progressive metropolitan government in the world Fifty years earlier London had been the worst slum city of the industrialized world over crowded congested polluted and ridden with disease The miasma theory did contribute to containing disease in urban settlements but did not allow the adoption of a suitable approach to the reuse of excreta in agriculture 29 It was a major factor in the practice of collecting human excreta from urban settlements and reusing them in the surrounding farmland That type of resource recovery scheme was common in major cities in the 19th century before the introduction of sewer based sanitation systems 30 Nowadays the reuse of excreta when done in a hygienic manner is known as ecological sanitation and is promoted as a way of closing the loop Throughout the 19th century concern about public health and sanitation along with the influence of the miasma theory were reasons for the advocacy of the then controversial practice of cremation If infectious diseases were spread by noxious gases emitted from decaying organic matter that included decaying corpses The public health argument for cremation faded with the eclipsing of the miasma theory of disease 31 Replacement by germ theory EditAlthough the connection between germ and disease was proposed quite early it was not until the late 1800s that the germ theory was generally accepted The miasmatic theory was challenged by John Snow suggesting that there was some means by which the disease was spread via a poison or morbid material orig materies morbi in the water 32 He suggested this before and in response to a cholera epidemic on Broad Street in central London in 1854 33 Because of the miasmatic theory s predominance among Italian scientists the discovery in the same year by Filippo Pacini of the bacillus that caused the disease was completely ignored It was not until 1876 that Robert Koch proved that the bacterium Bacillus anthracis caused anthrax 34 which brought a definitive end to miasma theory 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak Edit Main article 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak The work of John Snow is notable for helping to make the connection between cholera and typhoid epidemics and contaminated water sources which contributed to the eventual demise of miasma theory During the cholera epidemic of 1854 Snow traced high mortality rates among the citizens of Soho to a water pump in Broad Street Snow convinced the local government to remove the pump handle which resulted in a marked decrease in cases of cholera in the area In 1857 Snow submitted a paper to the British Medical Journal which attributed high numbers of cholera cases to water sources that were contaminated with human waste Snow used statistical data to show that citizens who received their water from upstream sources were considerably less likely to develop cholera than those who received their water from downstream sources Though his research supported his hypothesis that contaminated water not foul air was the source of cholera epidemics a review committee concluded that Snow s findings were not significant enough to warrant change and they were summarily dismissed Additionally other interests intervened in the process of reform Many water companies and civic authorities pumped water directly from contaminated sources such as the Thames to public wells and the idea of changing sources or implementing filtration techniques was an unattractive economic prospect In the face of such economic interests reform was slow to be adopted 24 In 1855 John Snow made a testimony against the Amendment to the Nuisances Removal and Diseases Prevention Act that regularized air pollution of some industries He claimed that That is possible but I believe that the poison of the cholera is either swallowed in water or got directly from some other person in the family or in the room I believe it is quite an exception for it to be conveyed in the air though if the matter gets dry it may be wafted a short distance 35 In the same year William Farr who was then the major supporter of the miasma theory issued a report to criticize the germ theory Farr and the Committee wrote that After careful inquiry we see no reason to adopt this belief We do not feel it established that the water was contaminated in the manner alleged nor is there before us any sufficient evidence to show whether inhabitants of that district drinking from that well suffered in proportion more than other inhabitants of the district who drank from other sources 36 37 Experiments by Louis Pasteur Edit The more formal experiments on the relationship between germ and disease were conducted by Louis Pasteur between 1860 and 1864 He discovered the pathology of the puerperal fever 38 and the pyogenic vibrio in the blood and suggested using boric acid to kill these microorganisms before and after confinement By 1866 eight years after the death of John Snow William Farr publicly acknowledged that the miasma theory on the transmission of cholera was wrong by his statistical justification on the death rate 36 Anthrax Edit Robert Koch is widely known for his work with anthrax discovering the causative agent of the fatal disease to be Bacillus anthracis 39 He published the discovery in a booklet as Die Atiologie der Milzbrand Krankheit Begrundet auf die Entwicklungsgeschichte des Bacillus Anthracis The Etiology of Anthrax Disease Based on the Developmental History of Bacillus Anthracis in 1876 while working in Wollstein 40 His publication in 1877 on the structure of anthrax bacterium 41 marked the first photography of a bacterium 24 He discovered the formation of spores in anthrax bacteria which could remain dormant under specific conditions 42 However under optimal conditions the spores were activated and caused disease 42 To determine this causative agent he dry fixed bacterial cultures onto glass slides used dyes to stain the cultures and observed them through a microscope 43 His work with anthrax is notable in that he was the first to link a specific microorganism with a specific disease rejecting the idea of spontaneous generation and supporting the germ theory of disease 39 In popular culture EditIn Inuyasha Naraku has the power of the miasma In Inuyasha the Movie Swords of an Honorable Ruler as Sō unga killed it the ogres and according to Saya their corpses contained the miasma In Episode 44 of Yashahime Princess Half Demon the Grim Comet has the miasma The video game Dwarf Fortress features miasma as a literal fog that emerges from rotten items and corpses It reduces the happiness of the dwarves though it doesn t necessarily cause them to fall ill See also EditGerm theory of disease Airborne disease HomeopathyReferences Edit John M Last ed 2007 miasma theory A Dictionary of Public Health Westminster College Pennsylvania Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516090 1 a b c Halliday Stephen 2001 Death and Miasma in Victorian London An Obstinate Belief British Medical Journal 323 7327 1469 1471 doi 10 1136 bmj 323 7327 1469 PMC 1121911 PMID 11751359 van der Eijk P J 2005 Hippocrates in Context Papers Read at the XIth International Hippocrates Colloquium University of Newcastle upon Tyne 27 31 August 2002 BRILL p 17 ISBN 9789004377271 Retrieved March 22 2021 Linda Nash Inescapable Ecologies A History of Environment Disease and Knowledge 2007 Suellen Hoy Chasing Dirt The American Pursuit of Cleanliness 1996 pp 104 13 Definition of MIASMA www merriam webster com Archived from the original on February 8 2018 Retrieved January 15 2018 Malouin Paul Jacques 1765 Miasma Encyclopedia of Diderot amp d Alembert Collaborative Translation Project Michigan Publishing University of Michigan Library hdl 2027 spo did2222 0000 369 Hippocrates On Airs Waters and Places Part 1 Retrieved June 1 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Vitruvius De architectura I 4 1 Latin text at LacusCurtius Brief History During the Snow Era John Snow Site UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology Archived from the original on January 17 2017 Retrieved January 15 2018 Who was William Farr PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 25 2009 Retrieved January 15 2018 Development of the Germ Theory of Disease PDF AS Science for Public Understanding Teacher Notes Nuffield Foundation March 25 2009 Archived from the original PDF on March 25 2009 Retrieved January 15 2018 Nightingale Florence 1861 Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes Harrison p 7 Retrieved July 25 2022 Valencius Conevery B The Health of the Country How American Settlers Understood Themselves and Their Land New York Basic Books 2002 pp 115 17 Print 隋 巢元方撰 曹赤電炳章圈點 巢氏諸病源候論 台北 國立中國醫藥研究所 1996 頁30 47 51 牟重行 王彩萍 中國歷史上的 瘴氣 考釋 國立臺灣師範大學地理研究報告 第38期 台北 國立臺灣師範大學地理學系 2003 頁25 Archived copy Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Retrieved June 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 牟重行 王彩萍 中國歷史上的 瘴氣 考釋 國立臺灣師範大學地理研究報告 第38期 台北 國立臺灣師範大學地理學系 2003 頁25 26 Archived copy Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Retrieved June 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 1 Translated by Arthur Waley in Chinese Poems 嶺外代答 维基文库 自由的图书馆 Archived from the original on March 19 2012 Retrieved June 14 2011 宋周去非 嶺外代答 卷十 276 龔勝生 2000年來中國瘴病分布變遷的初步研究 地理學報 第48卷第4期 西安 陜西師範大學中國歷史地理研究所 1993 頁305 312 Satti Jahangir 2009 Miasma Analysis via academia edu Baldwin Peter C 2003 How Night Air Became Good Air 1776 1930 Environmental History 8 3 412 429 doi 10 2307 3986202 JSTOR 3986202 S2CID 145338136 Cipolla Carlo M Miasmas and disease Public health and environment in the pre industrial age Yale University Press 1992 ISBN 0 300 04806 8 a b c d Gill Geoff Summer 2000 Cholera and the fight for public health reform in mid Victorian England Historian London 66 10 ProQuest 274942422 Whorton James 2001 The insidious foe sewer gas West J Med 175 6 427 428 doi 10 1136 ewjm 175 6 427 PMC 1275984 PMID 11733443 a b Sanitary Legislation No VII Nuisances Removal and Diseases Prevention Acts Consolidation and Amendment Bill Association Medical Journal 3 131 619 621 July 6 1855 JSTOR 25496511 a b Stanford Libraries Stanford Libraries Archived from the original on October 2 2013 Retrieved January 15 2018 European Sanitary Reform The British Sanitary Legislation The New York Times July 31 1865 Retrieved December 9 2016 Bracken P Wachtler A Panesar A R Lange J March 2007 The road not taken how traditional excreta and greywater management may point the way to a sustainable future Water Science and Technology Water Supply 7 1 219 227 doi 10 2166 ws 2007 025 Market Gardeners Tram Plateway Victorian Heritage Database Heritage Council of Victoria Retrieved March 18 2020 USA Encyclopedia of Cremation Surrey Ashgate Publishing 2005 Credo Reference Web 17 September 2012 On Continuous Molecular Changes More Particularly in Their Relation to Epidemic Diseases March 1853 Archived from the original on January 10 2018 Retrieved January 15 2018 via The John Snow Archive and Research Companion John Snow s Cholera Map Maps www york ac uk Archived from the original on March 10 2016 Retrieved January 15 2018 Robert Koch 1843 1910 www sciencemuseum org uk Archived from the original on January 25 2016 Retrieved January 15 2018 Frerichs Ralph R Snow s Testimony www ph ucla edu Archived from the original on June 3 2017 Retrieved January 15 2018 a b Frerichs Ralph R Competing Theories of Cholera www ph ucla edu Archived from the original on October 26 2017 Retrieved January 15 2018 Report of the Committee for Scientific Inquiries in Relation to the Cholera Epidemic of 1854 July 14 1855 Archived from the original on January 10 2018 Retrieved January 15 2018 via The John Snow Archive and Research Companion On the extension of the germ theory to the etiology of certain common diseases ebooks adelaide edu au Archived from the original on September 8 2017 Retrieved January 15 2018 a b Germ theory of disease World of Microbiology and Immunology Ed Brenda Wilmoth Lerner and K Lee Lerner Detroit Gale 2007 Biography in Context Web 14 April 2013 Koch Robert 2010 1876 Robert Koch Institut Die Atiologie der Milzbrand Krankheit begrundet auf die Entwicklungsgeschichte des Bacillus Anthracis Cohns Beitrage zur Biologie der Pflanzen in German 2 2 277 1 22 doi 10 25646 5064 Koch Robert 2010 1877 Verfahren zur Untersuchung zum Konservieren und Photographieren der Bakterien Beitrage zur Biologie der Pflanzen in German 2 399 434 doi 10 25646 5065 via Robert Koch Institut a b Heinrich Hermann Robert Koch World of Scientific Discovery Gale 2006 Biography in Context Web 14 April 2013 Robert Koch World of Microbiology and Immunology Ed Brenda Wilmoth Lerner and K Lee Lerner Detroit Gale 2006 Biography in Context Web 14 April 2013 Further reading EditBeasley Brett September 30 2015 Bad Air Pollution Sin and Science Fiction in William Delisle Hay s The Doom of the Great City 1880 The Public Domain Review 5 18 Sterner Carl S 2007 A Brief History of Miasmic Theory PDF Bulletin of the History of Medicine 22 1948 747 Thorsheim Peter 2006 Inventing Pollution Coal Smoke and Culture in Britain since 1800 Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 8214 1681 5 External links EditPrevailing theories before the germ theory Cholera theories Term definition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miasma theory amp oldid 1134574382, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.