Friday, July 27, 2012

Tea against dysentary

I mentioned a few days ago that tea was supposed to be associated with the decrease in cholera in the UK.

I can't remember where that lecture came from, but there is a lecture Cambridge that discusses some of the same issues:



Title: How did tea help infants against dysentery in England?
Authors: Macfarlane, Alan
Keywords: immunology
Issue Date: 5-Aug-2004
Abstract: How did tea help infants who were not themselves drinking tea to avoid water borne diseases? Alan Macfarlane explains that without tea, the industrial revolution would have been impossible.
URI: http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/585
Appears in Collections:Digital Orient


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I believe the original series where I heard the link was in this series of lectures LINK


Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat
lecture_malthus.mp4strategies1_malthus220.51 MBmp4View/Open
lecture_disease_routes.mp4strategies2_disease_routes59.13 MBmp4View/Open
McKeown.mp4strategies3_McKeown79.45 MBmp4View/Open
lecture_strategies_malaria.mp4strategies4_malaria245.43 MBmp4View/Open
lecture_dysentery.mp4strategies5_malaria135.25 MBmp4View/Open
lecture_war.mp4strategies6_war142.67 MBmp4View/Open
lecture_famine.mp4strategies7_famine170.51 MBmp4View/Open
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Sigh...yes, I know that the lectures have illustrations, but one does wish we could just download them as an MP3...

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