Carter T
Institute of Occupational Health and Centre for the History of Medicine, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK.
Occup Environ Med. 2004 Feb;61(2):103-7. doi: 10.1136/oem.2002.001131.
A century ago anthrax was a continuing health risk in the town of Kidderminster. The distribution of cases in people and in animals provides an indication of the routes by which spores were disseminated. The response to these cases provides an insight into attitudes to an occupational and environmental risk at the time and can be compared with responses in more recent times.
To assess the distribution of anthrax cases associated with the use of contaminated wool and to review the response to them.
The area studied was Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England, from 1900 to 1914. Data sources were national records of the Factory Inspectorate and local records from the infirmary, Medical Officer of Health and inquest reports, and county agricultural records, supplemented by contemporary and later review articles. Case reports and summary data were analysed, and discussions and actions taken to improve precautions reviewed.
There were 36 cases of anthrax, with five deaths, one of which was the sole case of the internal form of the disease. Cases of cutaneous anthrax were most frequently found in those handling raw wool, but they also occurred in workers at later stages of the spinning process and in people with little or no recorded exposure to contaminated wool. Limited precautionary measures were in place at the start of the study period. Some improvements were made, especially in the treatment of infections, but wool with a high risk of anthrax contamination continued to be used and cases continued to arise. Major changes were made to the disposal of waste and to agricultural practice in contaminated areas to curtail outbreaks in farm animals.
The introduction of anthrax as a contaminant of imported wool led not only to cases in the highly exposed groups of workers but also to cases in other members of the population and in farm animals. The measures taken during the study period reduced fatalities from cutaneous anthrax but did not eliminate the disease. Public concern about the cases was muted.
一个世纪前,炭疽病在基德明斯特镇一直是对健康的威胁。人和动物病例的分布情况能显示孢子传播的途径。对这些病例的应对措施能让我们了解当时人们对职业和环境风险的态度,并可与近期的应对情况进行比较。
评估与使用受污染羊毛相关的炭疽病例分布情况,并回顾对这些病例的应对措施。
研究区域为英格兰伍斯特郡的基德明斯特,时间跨度为1900年至1914年。数据来源包括工厂检查员的国家记录、医务室的地方记录、卫生官员记录及死因调查报道,以及郡农业记录,并辅以当时及后来的综述文章。对病例报告和汇总数据进行分析,并回顾为改进预防措施所进行的讨论和采取的行动。
共有36例炭疽病病例,5人死亡,其中1例是该病的唯一一例内脏型病例。皮肤炭疽病例最常出现在处理原羊毛的人员中,但也出现在纺纱过程后期的工人以及几乎没有或没有记录显示接触过受污染羊毛的人员中。在研究期开始时,预防措施有限。虽有一些改进,特别是在感染治疗方面,但仍继续使用有高度炭疽污染风险的羊毛,病例仍不断出现。对污染地区的废物处理和农业做法进行了重大改变,以减少农场动物中的疫情爆发。
炭疽作为进口羊毛的污染物,不仅导致了高暴露工人群体中的病例,还导致了其他人群和农场动物中的病例。研究期间采取的措施降低了皮肤炭疽的死亡率,但并未消除该疾病。公众对这些病例的关注较为淡漠。