THE AFTER EFFECTS
The
cause of the 1918 influenza pandemic was poorly understood.
The nature of viruses was undiscovered and scientists and
health workers believed the pandemic had been caused by a
bacterial infection. The general populace thought the infection
was due to, and spread by ‘germs' and believed that unsanitary
conditions in many homes had helped to spread the infection.
The matter was raised in Parliament during the height of the
pandemic.
Concerns
were also being raised at a local authority level.
Some
members of the Masterton Borough Council were also determined
that the town's housing stock should be made more hygienic.
A
motion was passed stating that the council would ‘go into
the matter of better living conditions, making it compulsory
for all homes to be equipped with wash-houses, tubs, coppers,
bath-rooms, and baths, and that the interior of all houses
be kept fit for human habitation.'
Although
the resolution was carried by the council, very little seems
to have been done to follow up. A ‘Health Vigilance Committee'
was established in Masterton but it met only briefly before
folding.
At
a national level, a royal commission into the pandemic in
1919 led to a revamping of the health services in New Zealand
, with separate divisions dealing with different aspects.
The creation of a Division of Maori Hygiene, under the direction
of Dr Peter Buck, was instrumental in quickly improving Maori
health.
Town
planning was also given a boost by the pandemic. Slum removal
and urban renewal was a hot topic at the initial meeting of
the Federation of Town Planning Associations in 1919.
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