SMOKE ABATEMENT AT NOTTINGHAM

Post on 01-Jan-2017

215 views 1 download

Transcript of SMOKE ABATEMENT AT NOTTINGHAM

1280

disease goes oftener undetected than in men. Per-nicious anaemia again is stated to be more common inmales in America; in this country, according toofficial figures, the death-rate is more than 13 percent. higher in women than in men.

THE FOOD-POISONING INCIDENT AT WEMBLEY.

SOME anxiety has been felt in regard to the recentoutbreak of acute gastro-enteritis among visitorsto the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley, andMajor-General S. Guise-Moores, late R.A.M.C.,director of medical services at the Exhibition, hasbeen good enough to furnish us with the followingnotes.

" Eighty-seven cases of intestinal disturbanceaccompanied by vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain,and constitutional symptoms, varying in severity,were admitted to the main ambulance station betweenthe hours of 1 and 8 P.M. on June 9th last. Thefirst symptoms supervened from one to three hoursafter partaking the mid-day’ meal. The particularcausative agent was the veal and ham pie, which waseaten by all the patients without exception. Theclinical and symptomatic evidence points to a

constitutional disorder due to the absorption of atoxin or toxins present in that food before it wasconsumed, and was not due to a bacterial infectionof the food with subsequent multiplication in theintestine. The majority of the cases admitted to themain ambulance station were sent to their homesby car the same evening. Those that lived at toogreat a distance from the Exhibition, nine in number,were despatched by motor ambulance to the WillesdenGeneral Hospital that night, and discharged the nextday. The ’ pies ’ were withdrawn from the restaurantsin their entirety very soon after the first cases wereseen at the ambulance station. Samples of the pieshave been sent for bacteriological investigation andreport. Separate investigations are being carriedout by the Exhibition authorities, the Ministry ofHealth, and the caterers concerned. The Ministryof Health has interested itself in the matter andsent Dr. Hancock to interview the D.M.S. of theExhibition."

General Guise-Moores concludes : " It is consideredthat local conditions played no part in the causationof this outbreak, but that it possibly lies with factorswhich at present are difficult to control."

SMOKE ABATEMENT AT NOTTINGHAM.

THE experiment described in the -,Ilu)iicipal .7oKr/M Iof June 6th, which is about to be made by theNottingham Corporation in order to abolish smoke,should prove of great interest. It has been realisedfor some years that the partial coking of coal ata temperature below that used in ordinary gas-workswas one of the means which might help towards thesolution of the smoke problem, providing as it doesa smokeless fuel suitable for domestic use as wellas a rich gas and valuable by-products. The difficultyin the past has been to find a commercially practicablemethod, since the cost as well as the quality of thefuel produced is one of the governing factors. Amarket for by-products is also essential for thecommercial success of such an undertaking. Theindustry of lace-making, which is special to Notting-ham, calls for a very clean air, and this doubtlesshad some influence in deciding the corporation. Theconditions under which 1000 tons of coal per daycan be treated at a colliery in the vicinity of thecity which provides a market for the solid fuel, gas,and by-products produced should give the experimentevery chance of success. We must join issue, however,with our contemporary when it is stated, with referenceto smoke, that " municipal authorities are unable toaccomplish any improvement worth speaking about."Measurements show that in London and Glasgowthere has been a great and steady improvement in

the direction of smoke reduction of recent years.There are, unfortunately, no measurements of smokepollution available for Nottingham, which may,therefore, call itself a

" clean city " without fear ofcontradiction. We would urge the corporationto obtain such measurements without delay for

comparison with future conditions which will resultfrom their experiment. Such figures would be of realvalue both to Nottingham and to the country generallyas indicating the degree of success attained.

NEW MENTAL HOSPITAL ACCOMMODATION.

LACK of hospital accommodation for mental diseaseis acute and almost universal : so long has it prevailed,indeed, that the communal conscience is in danger ofbecoming hardened. Two bright spots are on thepicture. One is the opening, just as we go to press,by the Minister of Health of the West Park MentalHospital, the fifth institution to be provided by theLondon County Council on the Horton estate atEpsom. This hospital, when completed, willaccommodate 2096 patients (1128 males and 968females), and includes an admission block, villas forconvalescent patients, special wards for the treatmentof tuberculosis and dysentery. A chapel, infirmary,and acute wards for female patients will not be readyfor occupation until the end of 1925. The otherbright spot is the decision of the governing bodyof the St. Andrew’s Hospital for Mental Diseases atNorthampton to erect a special hospital for the recep-tion and treatment of early cases of mental disorder.The foundation-stone is to be laid on June 27th,and judging by the plans contained in a circularaccompanying an invitation to this ceremony, a verycareful study has been made of arrangements elsewherefor the separation of the recently admitted from thechronic insane. Visits were paid by the subcommitteeentrusted with this duty to several psychiatric clinicson the Continent, and to an English spa for the purposeof studying hydrotherapy, which is to be an importantfeature of the treatment employed in the new hospital.Accommodation will be provided for 16 patients ofeach sex. The equipment of this hospital willevidently be more varied and extensive than that ofany other institution of its size in this country. Tenvarieties of hydrotherapy are provided for, bacterio-logical and chemical laboratories, rooms for X-rayand electrical treatment, a dentists’ room, and variousother facilities for special treatment. The authoritiesof the St. Andrew’s Hospital are to be congratulatedon tackling with such vigour an urgent problem whichis beset with difficulties. Not only will the expense ofbuilding this hospital be considerable, but the expenseof maintaining it in full working order will probablybe equivalent to a capital expenditure many timesgreater than the cost of building. A numerous staffwill be required in order to administer its specialdepartments with due efficiency, although in regard tolaboratory investigations it will be open to the hospitalto avail itself of the Joint Board of Research forMental Disease when material can be sent to Holly-moor for investigation. A precis of the year’s researchwork there appears on p. 1286. We have no informa-tion at present as to the arrangements in view for staff-ing St. Andrew’s Hospital, or as to the proportion of thecost of upkeep which is to be borne by the patients.It is observed that the hospital " can, if necessary,be extended," and one may safely predict that suchextension will be found desirable. The facilities fortreatment are arranged on such a scale as to be capableof dealing with a much larger number of patients thancan be accommodated in the hospital as planned atpresent. The success of this venture will be watchedwith keen interest by mental hospital authoritiesthroughout the country. In the millennium of lunacyadministration such a reception hospital will beconsidered a sine qua non by every large institution,and in the meantime it is probable that whereverextended accommodation is required the extensionwill take some such form as this.