Immigrant Health and the CommunityHarper & Brothers, 1921 - 481 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 18.
xvi. lappuse
... Preventive Medicine Fostered through Cura- tive 417 A Small Community Program 419 XIX . NATIONAL APPLICATIONS 429 Tasks for National and Local Organizations 429 Need for a Central Standardizing Agency 432 Training Health Workers 432 A ...
... Preventive Medicine Fostered through Cura- tive 417 A Small Community Program 419 XIX . NATIONAL APPLICATIONS 429 Tasks for National and Local Organizations 429 Need for a Central Standardizing Agency 432 Training Health Workers 432 A ...
327. lappuse
... preventive and educational work , such as advice to mothers concerning the care of babies and the supervision of baby feeding . But the tuber- culosis , venereal disease , and mental clinics , and to a greater or less extent the infant ...
... preventive and educational work , such as advice to mothers concerning the care of babies and the supervision of baby feeding . But the tuber- culosis , venereal disease , and mental clinics , and to a greater or less extent the infant ...
349. lappuse
... preventive medicine . This expansion of industrial medical work is ably 1 C. D. Selby , Studies of the Medical and Surgical Care of Industrial Workers , United States Department of Labor , 1918 . brought out by Dr. Harry E. Mock , in ...
... preventive medicine . This expansion of industrial medical work is ably 1 C. D. Selby , Studies of the Medical and Surgical Care of Industrial Workers , United States Department of Labor , 1918 . brought out by Dr. Harry E. Mock , in ...
359. lappuse
... preventive work , and that is the ultimate interest of such organi- zations as these in New York City . It should be apparent that plans for co - operative medical service by and for employees will not super- sede the well - developed ...
... preventive work , and that is the ultimate interest of such organi- zations as these in New York City . It should be apparent that plans for co - operative medical service by and for employees will not super- sede the well - developed ...
372. lappuse
... preventive medicine . Whatever the industry's responsibilities and opportunities in regard to labor in general , these are intensified in the case of the immigrant by his comparative ignorance and helplessness in his new environment ...
... preventive medicine . Whatever the industry's responsibilities and opportunities in regard to labor in general , these are intensified in the case of the immigrant by his comparative ignorance and helplessness in his new environment ...
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agencies Association Austria-Hungary average babies better birth boiled Bureau Census cent Chicago clinic co-operation cooked death rate Department of Health developed diet dietary dietitians disease dishes dispensary district doctors Dolma eggs employees foreign born Greek health center health department Health Insurance health officer hospital housing Hungary hygiene immigrant immigrant's important industrial infant mortality infant-welfare interpreter Italian Italy Jewish Jews labor language large cities large number Leiserson live Magyar maternity meat medical advertisements medical and health medical service medicine ment methods midwifery midwives milk mortality rate native American native born neighborhood obstetrical organizations persons physicians Poles Polish population practice prenatal problems Public Health quack race race groups racial recipes Russian secure sickness Slovak social workers soup supervision tablespoonfuls tion tuberculosis understand United usually vegetables visiting nurses women York City
Populāri fragmenti
34. lappuse - it is apparent that there is a substantial difference between the per cent of rejections in native and alien communities. An additional light on this subject is thrown by a report from local board for Division No. 129, New York City. This board, realizing a great opportunity,
363. lappuse - and Lauck, The Immigration Problem, fourth edition, 1913, p. 493. Company of Detroit, 1 "there are thousands paid out for injuries, many of which may be traced directly to the inability of the employee to understand English." Clarence H. Howard, president of the Commonwealth Steel Company, St. Louis, says: 2 "Records kept in our industry show that 80 per cent of the
34. lappuse - of New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Cleveland, Milwaukee, and Cincinnati, representing a registration of 300,000. Then some 100,000 examinations were similarly assembled from other than city boards in the states of Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, and Ohio, representing also a registration of
205. lappuse - by Dr. S. Josephine Baker, Director of the Bureau of Child Hygiene of the New York City Department of
117. lappuse - 1 Ibid., vol. ii, p. 50. cut off. But this defect is not confined to Croatia. It was among the Slovaks that a priest told us that he preached against windows "so small that it made an eclipse of the sun if a hen flew
187. lappuse - 1 Peter Roberts, The New Immigration, 1914, pp. 368-369. (Appended material abstracted from Immigration Commission's Report on "Fecundity of Immigrant Women," pp. 46-52.) 2 PR Eastman, New York State Department of Health. A Comparison of the Birth Rates of Native and of Foreign-born White Women in the State of New York During 1916, 1916, p. 3. ' Peter Roberts, The New Immigration, 1912, p. 373. 185
449. lappuse - shown that the data of anthropology teach us a greater tolerance of forms of civilization different from our own, and that we should learn to look upon foreign races with greater sympathy, and with the conviction that, as all races have contributed in the past to cultural progress in one way or another, so they will be capable of advancing the interests of mankind, if we are only willing to give them
383. lappuse - The industrial physician should be directly responsible to one of the high officials of his plant, as the head of any major department would be. Only in that way will the full value and importance of the medical work be realized. The larger problem of industrial medicine hinges
362. lappuse - noted more pernicious anaemia among Swedes than among the southern European races. So he will go on analyzing the data secured day by day in the routine work of the clinic, and applying the knowledge gained to the practical demands of his
35. lappuse - made careful anthropometric studies of about 600 registrants. A preliminary report said: 1 Time has been lacking for a final study of the observed data. However, the figures seem to indicate that the foreignborn registrants were markedly less fit for service than the native born. Since this report was written this local board has gone farther into the matter and summarized certain results which verify these preliminary conclusions: 2 While the