A History of Epidemics in Britain, Volume 2 (of 2) by Charles Creighton

437. Heberden’s paper was read at the College, Aug. 11, 1767.

[651] The nearest approach to Heberden’s London influenza of 1767 is an epidemic that Sims observed in Tyrone in the autumn of 1767; a season remarkable for measles and acute rheumatism. At the same time that the acute rheumatism prevailed, a fever showed itself, like it; the patients for two or three days were languid, chilly, with pains in the bones, headache, stupor, dry tongue, costiveness. It was marked by remissions, was by no means mortal, and usually ended by a sweat from the 14th to the 17th day, followed by a copious deposit in the urine. James Sims, _Obs. on Epidemic Disorders_, Lond. 1773, p. 84. [652] Anthony Fothergill, _Mem. Med. Soc._ III. 30. This paper is not included in John Fothergill’s series. There is also a separate Dublin essay, _Advice to the People upon the Epidemic Catarrhal Fever of Oct. Nov. Dec. 1775_. By a Physician. [653] I have not found the weekly bills for this year in London; but the following averages, taken from the four-weekly or five-weekly totals in the _Gentleman’s Magazine_, will show how slight the rise was: