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Deadly epidemics swept through 19th-century cities with terrifying regularity, leaving medical practitioners like Drs. Watts and Mayo powerless against invisible killers they couldn't understand.
What made these diseases so devastating, and how did we finally conquer them? Our medical expert takes us through the horrifying reality of cholera – nicknamed "the blue death" for the distinctive colour it turned victims' skin. The disease could kill within hours as patients lost up to 20 litres of fluid daily. During London's 1854 Soho outbreak, over 600 people died in a small neighbourhood within days.
The prevailing "miasma" theory blamed disease on foul air, until pioneering physician Dr John Snow meticulously mapped cholera cases around a contaminated water pump. His groundbreaking work effectively birthed modern epidemiology, proving disease spread through water rather than air – though the actual cholera bacterium wouldn't be discovered until decades later by Robert Koch.
We also explore the devastating impact of smallpox, which killed 30% of those infected and left survivors permanently scarred. The disease proved particularly catastrophic when introduced to populations with no previous exposure – like Australia's First Nations peoples, who suffered up to 70% mortality after the 1789 Sydney outbreak. The controversial origins of this epidemic raise difficult questions about early colonial history.
The podcast reveals fascinating stories behind smallpox vaccination – how Chinese and Islamic practitioners performed early forms of inoculation centuries before Edward Jenner, and how the famous "milkmaid story" about Jenner's discovery was actually fabricated by his biographer. Even more surprising, we discover that vaccine hesitancy isn't new – cartoons from 1802 show the same concerns we see in modern debates.
Join us for this eye-opening journey through medical history that shows how far we've come in disease understanding and treatment, while highlighting the crucial public health measures – like clean water systems – that save countless lives today. Next episode, we'll examine specific diseases encountered during Dr Mayo's 1836 voyage to Australia.
Contact us at [email protected].
Send us a text
Deadly epidemics swept through 19th-century cities with terrifying regularity, leaving medical practitioners like Drs. Watts and Mayo powerless against invisible killers they couldn't understand.
What made these diseases so devastating, and how did we finally conquer them? Our medical expert takes us through the horrifying reality of cholera – nicknamed "the blue death" for the distinctive colour it turned victims' skin. The disease could kill within hours as patients lost up to 20 litres of fluid daily. During London's 1854 Soho outbreak, over 600 people died in a small neighbourhood within days.
The prevailing "miasma" theory blamed disease on foul air, until pioneering physician Dr John Snow meticulously mapped cholera cases around a contaminated water pump. His groundbreaking work effectively birthed modern epidemiology, proving disease spread through water rather than air – though the actual cholera bacterium wouldn't be discovered until decades later by Robert Koch.
We also explore the devastating impact of smallpox, which killed 30% of those infected and left survivors permanently scarred. The disease proved particularly catastrophic when introduced to populations with no previous exposure – like Australia's First Nations peoples, who suffered up to 70% mortality after the 1789 Sydney outbreak. The controversial origins of this epidemic raise difficult questions about early colonial history.
The podcast reveals fascinating stories behind smallpox vaccination – how Chinese and Islamic practitioners performed early forms of inoculation centuries before Edward Jenner, and how the famous "milkmaid story" about Jenner's discovery was actually fabricated by his biographer. Even more surprising, we discover that vaccine hesitancy isn't new – cartoons from 1802 show the same concerns we see in modern debates.
Join us for this eye-opening journey through medical history that shows how far we've come in disease understanding and treatment, while highlighting the crucial public health measures – like clean water systems – that save countless lives today. Next episode, we'll examine specific diseases encountered during Dr Mayo's 1836 voyage to Australia.
Contact us at [email protected].
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