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− | <p0>A Cholera epidemic in Paris around 1830 and several breakouts in London inspired a renewed focus on sewage treatment. Cholera is one of many bacterial pathogens originating in untreated wastewater from the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. Enter Claude-Philibert Barthelot, Henry Charles Emmery, and Georges Haussman, the men responsible for the introduction of underground gutters and over 600km of of new pipes and ducts in Paris. </p0> | + | <p0>A Cholera epidemic in Paris around 1830 and several breakouts in London inspired a renewed focus on sewage treatment. Cholera is one of many bacterial pathogens originating in untreated wastewater from the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. <b>Enter Claude-Philibert Barthelot, Henry Charles Emmery, and Georges Haussman,</b> the men responsible for the introduction of underground gutters and over 600km of of new pipes and ducts in Paris. </p0> |
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− | <p0>For reference, 200 years after the first Cholera outbreak of 1817 in the delta of the Ganges, India, the pathogen still claims 143,000 lives each year. As reported by WHO, nearly 4 million people were infected in 2017, predominantly in third-world countries.</p0> | + | <p0>For reference, 200 years after the first Cholera outbreak of 1817 in the delta of the Ganges, India, <b>the pathogen still claims 143,000 lives each year.</b> As reported by WHO, <b>nearly 4 million people were infected in 2017,</b> predominantly in third-world countries.</p0> |
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Revision as of 18:45, 26 July 2017