Impact of Industrial Revolution on health of Europe and US in 18th & 19th century correct answers • hunting and gathering is dangerous and food becomes
... [Show More] scarce.
• Some wild animals were lived with on farm land and plants grew well in fertile soil bu water sources.
• Animals are tamed and used for labor and food and extra care for plants turned into bigger grains and more crops.
• People began to have a surplus of food and began to divide labor and trade goods in permanent villages.
• This turned into larger settlements and towns with close proximity living, garbage and feces fostering disease, and attraction of vectors.
• There was tradeoff between starvation v variety. Less starvation but less varied diet. Reliance on 1 or 2 crops = nutritional deficiencies and skull pitting.
• This lifestyle caused things like the bubonic plague that was thought to have been from miasma theory or gods punishment.
Outbreaks in due to industrial revolution correct answers o Housing built quickly, with no master plan
o Closed Quarts: houses built back-to-back
♣ Quick and most people as possible
♣ Everything happened in little courtyards
o Kids developed Rickets
♣ Caused by Vitamin-D deficiency
♣ The kids weren't getting enough sun
♣ Legs bow without vitamin D
o Outhouse toilets were shared
o Garbage thrown in streets
♣ Tenement museum in NYC - lower east side
o Privatized water in London
♣ not distributed equally, pay as you go
♣ Couldn't afford you often got lower quality water
o Cholera
♣ 1832: epidemics in london, paris, NY
♣ 7,000 die in london
• When water & sanitation are not separated
Bill of Mortality correct answers How many people live in a community / social mathematics/numbering of the people.
-Number and health of population were measures of the monarchy's strengtho Vital statistics
o 1603 listed deaths by parish as a way to track plague deaths
o 1629 cause of death lifted
o 1836 much more organized - registrar general's office - birth, marriage, death
Utilitarianism by Jeremy Bentham correct answers Defined as the greatest good for the greatest number [Show Less]