Page 35 - PERSIAN 4 1899_1905
P. 35

RESIDENCY AND MASKAT POLITICAL AGENCY FOR THE YEAR 1899-1900.
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         fact that the localiUea most severely affected were those in which the most unfavourable
         bypiemc conditions both of the porsons inhabiting them and their surroundings abounded.
         Dcnfoly-pcopled huts with barely .any ventilation in th-m and situated in the vicinity of
         graveyards and mounds of rubbish and filth including human and other excreta in all stages
         of decomposition, such ns exist in the suburbs of Jabra and Tuyan and in the Aryaneh
         quarter of the town contributed tbo largest number of viotiras to the disease. It was most
         rife in the following four localities.

                              Names of localities.              Number of attacks.

         Suburb of Tayan   .   •   .   ,                           806
            „ of Jnbrn   .   .   .                                 )45
         Arvaneb (a quarter of the town)                           127
         Baluchi quarter (a quarter of the town)                    97

            The total number of deaths in Maskat and Matrah together, ns far as it bns been
                     Mortality.         possible to ascertain, as due to cholera was 726,
                       ,   *            giving a ratio cf about 54 per cent, to attache and
         one  of 2-9 per cent, to the population. This ratio of deaths to attacked was slightly more
         than the usually accepted average of 50 per cent, and appears, in my opinion, to°have been
         somewhat influenced by the nature of the treatment that was adopted in the majority of the
         case.-, ior judging from the result of the comparatively few ca«es for which medical relief was
         soeght either at the bcspi'al or with me in Matrah, which gives a ratio of only 23’8 per cent,
         of deaths to attacked, there is reason to think that a more favourable result might have been
         obtained bad it been possible to induce the friends of many more of the attacked persona to
         call f«'r medical relief instead of their trusting to irrational remedies and measures. Even in
         the case of such of the attached poisons a« were tnated by ns, a further reduction in the ratio
         of mortality might have bc^n looked for had th«*ir fiiends been more prompt in calling for
         medical relief and more persevering and regular in reporting the progress of snch cases, for in
         msny instance* it occurred that after the receipt of the first medicine or medicines no further
         report was brought.
            The number of deaths in Maskat was 274 giving a ratio of about 61 per cant, to the
                                       attacked and one of 2 7 percent, to the general
                  Death* io Mask at.
                                       population. The rates of mortality in proportion to
         the attacked among all the three principal classes were very close to one another, the Arabs
        having had it in the ratio of 63*1 per cent., the Baluchis 60*4 per cent., and the Africanj 61*2
         per ct-nt. The slightly higher rate of mortality among the Arabs may have becD to some
        extent die to the pnctic°B of branding and bathing in cold water as remedial measures more
        commonly resorted to by them than the other ract-6. There were so few attacks among the
        two Ituliau e mmunities—the Muhammadans and Hindus—that it would not be fair to
         compare the rates of mortality among them with those atnoug the other races.
            As regards age, the rates of mortality among the adults and children were much about
        th» same, having been in the ratio of Gl per cent, among the former and 60*4 per ceut. among
        th;la*.ter. In a sciual point of view, however* the mortality among men (65*4 per cent.)
        was by far the largest, that among women having been only 56*2 percent.
            Although the nnmber of attacks in the village of Sadab, which is- principally inhabited
        by fis-ierah-n' and lower classes of Arabs, was smaller than in some of the other localities, the
        mortality in ii was proportionately much higher, giving the-highest ratio of 80 per cent, to
        the aiiaikcd. Maknlla, inhabited as it is by poor fishermen from Socotra, with only a few
        attack-, gave also a high rate of mortality, namely, 75 per cent, whilst Takia and Tuyan
        principally inhabited by Baluchis were neatly alike in the ratio per cent, of mortality,
        the f.-rroer having had 67*4 per cent, and the latter 65‘3 per cent. The smallest rate of mor­
        tality in proportion to the attacked was in the town of Maskat itself, which may be accounted
        t»r partly by the fact of more attacked persons there having Lad recourse to our treatment
        than in any other locality and partly by the fact of the people living in it being of a class
        in better circumstances and therefore better able to command the necessary attendance and
        comfort.
           The ratio per cent, of deaths to attacked in Matrah compares rather favourably with that
                                       in Maskat aod is as near the average rate of
                  Deaths in Matrah.    cholera mortality as it can be. There were in all
        452 deaths giving a ratio per cent oE 50*7 to attacked nguinst 274 deaths and a ratio per cent,
        of Gl in Ma*dcat It is not e;»6y to ncoount satisfactorily for this great difference in tbo rate3
        of mortality in the two places, situat'd as they are sc close to each other, and I can only
        sugoest in explanation the circumstance of the epidemic taken as a whole having begun and
        ended in Matrah. It is a well-known fact that during the commencement and decline of an
        epidemic of cholera particularly the latter cases often recover even without any treatment.
        Besides, although the hygienic conditions in 6omc of the localities, particularly in the suburbs,
        in both the plawa are very much alike, Matrah being much opener has the advantage over
        Maskat of obtaining more benefit from two of nature^ greatest disinfectants—light and heat.
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