William Budd (14 September 1811 – 9 January 1880) was an English physician and Epidemiology known for recognizing that infectious diseases were contagious. He recognized that the "poisons" involved in infectious diseases multiplied in the intestines of the sick, were present in their leaks, and could then be transmitted to the healthy through their consumption of contaminated water.Asimov, Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology 2nd Revised edition
He particularly understood this about the transmission of cholera (as he learned from the work of the physician John Snow) and typhoid fever.
Using his theory and reading John Snow's essay about cholera in London (1849), Budd took measures to protect Bristol's water supply.Robert Moorhead, " William Budd and typhoid fever", J R Soc Med., 2002 November; 95(11): 561–564, Retrieved 7 March 2010 He announced the importance of the work of two Bristol colleagues, Frederick Brittan and Joseph Griffiths Swayne, of organisms (described as "fungoid") in the "rice-water evacuations" of cholera victims. The work of Brittan and Swayne was disregarded at the time, when the miasma theory of infections from the air prevailed. Budd, on the other hand, is credited with decreasing the incidence of deaths in Bristol from cholera, from 2000 (out of a population of 140,000) in 1849 to 29 in 1866.
Budd's obituary is found in the Lancet 1880;i: 148. Part of William Budd's archive is held at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
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