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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_SnowJohn Snow - Wikipedia

    John Snow (15 March 1813 – 16 June 1858) was an English physician and a leader in the development of anaesthesia and medical hygiene. He is considered one of the founders of modern epidemiology and early germ theory , in part because of his work in tracing the source of a cholera outbreak in London's Soho , which he identified as a particular ...

  2. Mar 30, 2018 · John Snow conducted pioneering investigations on cholera epidemics in England and particularly in London in 1854 in which he demonstrated that contaminated water was the key source of the epidemics.

  3. Jun 3, 2024 · John Snow was an English physician known for his seminal studies of cholera and widely viewed as the father of contemporary epidemiology. His best-known studies include his investigation of London’s Broad Street pump outbreak, which occurred in 1854, and his “Grand Experiment,” a study comparing.

  4. Mar 8, 2022 · Snow’s first significant encounter with cholera occurred in 1832. The second cholera pandemic was sweeping through England, leaving hospitals severely understaffed. Snow, then a 19-year-old apprentice, was sent to care for the workers in the mining village of Killingworth.

  5. May 28, 2018 · An 1854 cholera outbreak in London confounded those who thought the disease was caused by miasma, or foul air. Enter John Snow, who had already made a name for himself by administering chloroform to Queen Victoria during childbirth.

  6. Dec 9, 2016 · But it was not until 1854 that the physician John Snow (1813-1858) made a major contribution to fighting cholera when he was able to demonstrate a link between cholera and the contaminated drinking water through his pioneering studies.

  7. Aug 18, 2010 · Cholera, John Snow and the Grand Experiment. A British physician first determined that cholera spread through contaminated water in the 1850s, but the disease remains a major health...

  8. Discover facts about John Snow who famously identified a pump as being the source of a cholera outbreak in 1854.

  9. May 18, 2006 · In 1853-4, when a cholera pandemic hit London, one of the two major water supply firms, the Lambeth Company, had moved its Thames intakes upriver, above the tidal (and therefore sewage) reach. Snow showed that most of the cholera deaths occurred …. View Full Text.

  10. May 26, 2010 · In September 1854, central London suffered an outbreak of cholera. 1 To stop that outbreak, Dr. John Snow made a map. By seeing, visually, where the cholera deaths were clustered, Snow showed that the water from a pump on Broad Street was to blame.

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