
How did sanitation become one of public health's greatest triumphs, while being its oldest unfinished problem?
In this episode of the Public Health Insight Podcast, host Gordon Thane traces the story from Victorian Britain's overcrowded streets to Edwin Chadwick's groundbreaking 1842 report, which reframed disease as a product of ”removable circumstances” rather than individual fate. We revisit the Great Stink of 1858, when London's sewage crisis finally reached Parliament, where swift action followed. Then we confront a sobering reality: 3.4 billion people still lack safely managed sanitation today.
Sources for Content
- Chadwick, Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain
- UK Parliament — 1842 Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population
- UK Parliament — The 1848 Public Health Act
- London Museum — The Great Stink of 1858
- Science Museum — Flushed Away: Sewers Through History
- Royal Museums Greenwich — Dickens and The Great Stink of 1858
- WHO/UNICEF JMP — Progress on Household Drinking Water, Sanitation and Hygiene 2000–2024
- UNICEF — Fast Facts: 1 in 4 People Globally Still Lack Access to Safe Drinking Water
- WHO — Sanitation Fact Sheet
- Britannica — Sir Edwin Chadwick
- EBSCO — Edwin Chadwick
- Vaishali — Edwin Chadwick: A Pioneer of Public Health Reform and His Relevance to Modern Public Health Practice
Host & Producer
◼️Gordon Thane, BMSc, MPH, PMP®
Production Notes
◼️ Music from Johnny Harris x Tom Fox: The Music Room
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