Refine Search

Countries

Regions

East, England

Counties

Bedfordshire, England

Place

Luton, Bedfordshire, England

Access Type

345

Type

317
28

Public Tags

No tags available

R SYCAMORE

... whatever they may which kill 120,000 infants in England every year maim and injure many more which survive. As Sir Jono Simon (then the Chief Medical Officer of the Privy Council) said manv years ago, high infant mortality necessarily note* a prevalence of ...

The Saving of Infant life

... that w« ore within meaaur. kbie distant* bringing about the abolition of infant mortality even within the narrow area this experiment. . the attempt to diminish infantile mortality have often ccme conflict with the doctrinc enunciated a quiet scientific ...

Published: Friday 03 January 1908
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 307 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

SHAM SUGAR:

... would not dissolve. In Dr. Blake's opinion this is a cruel fraud, which throws light on the grave question of increased infant mortality. This metallicdressed sugar, imported from abroad, chiefly from Germany, has killed hundreds of babie6, especially in ...

Published: Friday 21 August 1903
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 287 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

MR. RUDD AND lA)RD BATTERSEA. To THE EDITOR

... has nothing whatever to do with the evils on which Lord Battersea animadverted. The subject was the very high rate of infant mortality at Luton and its causes. Now Sir, Lord Battersea asserted that he had the best authority for stating that OHO of the ...

Published: Friday 20 January 1893
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 315 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

for given • very hot summer next year, w• m 7 easily rife to our older averages. - hot only

... counter-balanced by a much greeter mortality from diarrhoea and premature birth. While Dr. Tatham attebutes the increase of the former to the artificial feeding of infants, he gives no reason for the increase in the mortality from the latter,or of the decrease ...

Published: Friday 30 March 1906
Newspaper: Luton Reporter
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 773 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

FATAL FLANNELETTE. A SUGGESTION FOR DRAPERS

... ion. It would constitute an effort to tusk, good parental neglect, it might serve to reduce the lamentable amount of infant mortality which ran be traced to flannelette. ...

Published: Friday 01 March 1907
Newspaper: Luton Reporter
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 343 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

FOOD FOR BABES

... to the medical profession, it the unsuitable milk so generally given to young children that is the cause of the high infant mortality, and also the lickety condition and poor physical development of the rising generation. Henoe the necessity for more ...

Published: Friday 29 May 1903
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 415 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

Physical Degeneration

... was the only real training to enable girls to become wives and mothers, and its unpopularity was responsible for high infant mortality, impaired physique, and perverted dt thcYucrease of insanity Dr. Jones had doubt that a large proportion was aue to alcohol ...

Published: Friday 11 March 1904
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 378 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

VITAL STATIbTICtf

... decrease noise the object of infant mortality of locreadoel y greet oatlosal importimoo. As the birth-rate is still on the dosniward grade it behoves as to do all that se Um so to moderate the mortality generally, and infest 'mortality in perticater, am in some ...

Published: Thursday 11 August 1904
Newspaper: Luton Reporter
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 942 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

SANITARY

... assured the Council that fatbad been seriously mentioned commiltes and the doctor bad remarked that apart fro;, this high infant mortality the death rate a Luton would be exceedingly low. went on t. say that all thia year there had been exaggerate refmrts ...

Life in New Zealand

... countries with a high civilisation, but there is a fair amount of increase — and then it must be remembered that the rate of infant mortality is less than half what it is in Great Britain. The whole child population is, in fact, positively bursting with health ...

Published: Friday 12 April 1907
Newspaper: Luton Times and Advertiser
County: Bedfordshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 427 | Page: 7 | Tags: none