Public health measures against neonatal tetanus on the island of Vestmannaeyjar (Iceland) during the 19th century |
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Authors: |
lf Gararsdttir Loftur Guttormsson |
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Institution: | aUniversity of Iceland, School of Education, Stakkahlíð, 105 Reykjavík, Iceland |
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Abstract: | The article presents a study of neonatal tetanus on the tiny island of Vestmannaeyjar (Iceland) during the 18th and 19th centuries. At an early date, Vestmannaeyjar was known for its high levels of mortality from neonatal tetanus. This appalling mortality is analysed, inter alia, on the basis of parish registers at the individual family level. During the late 18th and early 19th centuries, more than three out of four newborns on the island died during the first 2 weeks of life. At the beginning of the 19th century, Icelandic and Danish authorities had already showed great interest in improving infant survival on Vestmannaeyjar. In 1827 a physician was appointed to the island and by the late 1840s the disease was successfully fought on the island. The achievement on Vestmannaeyjar is a good example of how the sanitary movement was able to bring about important improvements in infant survival long before the breakthrough of the bacteriological revolution. |
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Keywords: | Hygiene Infant mortality Miasmata theory Neonatal tetanus P A Schleisner Public health Vestmannaeyjar |
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