Page:Siberia and the Exile System Vol 1.djvu/119

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THE TIUMÉN FORWARDING PRISON
97

The natural result of such overcrowding as this, in old buildings, not properly warmed, ventilated, or drained, is an extremely high death-rate. The following table of sickness and mortality is from the annual report of the inspector of exile transportation for the year 1885.

HOSPITAL RECORD OF TIUMÉN FORWARDING PRISON.

1885. Month. Average
daily
number of
prisoners.
Average
daily
number
in
hospital.
Percent. Number
of
deaths.
January 705.2 88.3 12.5 14
February 668.4 62.6 9.3 9
March 670   50   7.4 3
April 823.1 58.5 7.1 2
May 1200   60.6 5   10
June 1278.6 78.2 6.1 18
July 963.5 78   7.8 18
August 431.3 46   3.2[1] 20
September 346.6 34.3 9.9 15
October 682.8 48   7   8
November 964   71.6 7.4 12
December 709   89.8 12.6 20

Average daily number of prisoners for the year, 786. Total number of deaths, 182. Death rate, 23.1 per cent.

The significance of the figures in the foregoing table will become apparent if the reader will take into consideration the fact that the average death-rate in English towns is from 1.9 to 2.5 per cent. Even in the most benighted and unheathful parts of Siberia, where there are no physicians, where the peasants are densely ignorant, and where no attention whatever is paid to the laws of health, the death-rate rarely exceeds 6 per cent. In the Tiumén forwarding prison in 1885 it was 23.1 per cent. Nor was the year 1885 an exceptional year in the sense of being worse than usual.

  1. Error in original report. Should be 11.3.