123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081 |
- ---
- interact_link: content/chapters/02/2/snow-s-grand-experiment.md
- kernel_name:
- has_widgets: false
- title: |-
- Snow’s “Grand Experiment”
- prev_page:
- url: /chapters/02/1/observation-and-visualization-john-snow-and-the-broad-street-pump.html
- title: |-
- John Snow and the Broad Street Pump
- next_page:
- url: /chapters/02/3/establishing-causality.html
- title: |-
- Establishing Causality
- comment: "***PROGRAMMATICALLY GENERATED, DO NOT EDIT. SEE ORIGINAL FILES IN /content***"
- ---
- <div class="jb_cell">
- <div class="cell border-box-sizing text_cell rendered"><div class="inner_cell">
- <div class="text_cell_render border-box-sizing rendered_html">
- <h2 id="Snow’s-“Grand-Experiment”">Snow’s “Grand Experiment”<a class="anchor-link" href="#Snow’s-“Grand-Experiment”"> </a></h2><p>Encouraged by what he had learned in Soho, Snow completed a more thorough
- analysis. For some time, he had been gathering data on cholera
- deaths in an area of London that was served by two water companies. The Lambeth
- water company drew its water upriver from where sewage was discharged into the
- River Thames. Its water was relatively clean. But the Southwark and Vauxhall
- (S&V) company drew its water below the sewage discharge, and thus its supply was
- contaminated.</p>
- <p>The map below shows the areas served by the two companies. Snow honed in on the region where the two service areas overlap.
- <img src="../../../images/snow_map2.jpg" alt="Snow’s Other Map"></p>
- <p>Snow noticed that there was no systematic difference between the people who were
- supplied by S&V and those supplied by Lambeth. “Each company supplies both rich
- and poor, both large houses and small; there is no difference either in the
- condition or occupation of the persons receiving the water of the different
- Companies … there is no difference whatever in the houses or the people
- receiving the supply of the two Water Companies, or in any of the physical
- conditions with which they are surrounded …”</p>
- <p>The only difference was in the water supply, “one group being supplied with
- water containing the sewage of London, and amongst it, whatever might have come
- from the cholera patients, the other group having water quite free from
- impurity.”</p>
- <p>Confident that he would be able to arrive at a clear conclusion, Snow summarized
- his data in the table below.</p>
- <table>
- <thead><tr>
- <th>Supply Area</th>
- <th>Number of houses</th>
- <th>cholera deaths</th>
- <th>deaths per 10,000 houses</th>
- </tr>
- </thead>
- <tbody>
- <tr>
- <td>S&V</td>
- <td>40,046</td>
- <td>1,263</td>
- <td>315</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Lambeth</td>
- <td>26,107</td>
- <td>98</td>
- <td>37</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rest of London</td>
- <td>256,423</td>
- <td>1,422</td>
- <td>59</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
- </table>
- <p>The numbers pointed accusingly at S&V. The death rate from cholera in the S&V
- houses was almost ten times the rate in the houses supplied by Lambeth.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
|