Immigrant Health and the CommunityHarper & Brothers, 1921 - 481 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 50.
ix. lappuse
... agencies engaged in various forms of social activity intended to extend among the people of the United States the knowledge of their government and their obligations to it . The trustees felt that a study which should set forth , not ...
... agencies engaged in various forms of social activity intended to extend among the people of the United States the knowledge of their government and their obligations to it . The trustees felt that a study which should set forth , not ...
xii. lappuse
... Agencies 107 Advantage in Friendly Assistance 110 VI . IMMIGRANT BACKGROUNDS Peasant Origins Public vs. Private Health Administration Unfamiliarity with Medical Resources New Relations to Government in this Country 121 112 113 117 120 ...
... Agencies 107 Advantage in Friendly Assistance 110 VI . IMMIGRANT BACKGROUNDS Peasant Origins Public vs. Private Health Administration Unfamiliarity with Medical Resources New Relations to Government in this Country 121 112 113 117 120 ...
xiv. lappuse
... AGENCIES AND METHODS XIII . FIELD WORK WITH THE IMMIGRANT 283 The Problem of Approach 284 Barrier of Language 286 Knowledge of Backgrounds 294 Localization of Health Work Summary 299 302 XIV . THE HOSPITAL 305 Immigrant Attitudes 306 ...
... AGENCIES AND METHODS XIII . FIELD WORK WITH THE IMMIGRANT 283 The Problem of Approach 284 Barrier of Language 286 Knowledge of Backgrounds 294 Localization of Health Work Summary 299 302 XIV . THE HOSPITAL 305 Immigrant Attitudes 306 ...
23. lappuse
... agencies of government , and all organized co- operative activities for mutual benefit , must be adapted to serve individual needs . The principle of authority must be given its place , but the principle of democ- racy must dominate it ...
... agencies of government , and all organized co- operative activities for mutual benefit , must be adapted to serve individual needs . The principle of authority must be given its place , but the principle of democ- racy must dominate it ...
37. lappuse
... agencies . In the investigation of the physical welfare of 1,400 school children , New York , 1907 , the proportion of malnourishment cases varied in the several races.1 TABLE V PER CENT OF FOURTEEN HUNDRED NEW YORK SCHOOL CHILDREN ...
... agencies . In the investigation of the physical welfare of 1,400 school children , New York , 1907 , the proportion of malnourishment cases varied in the several races.1 TABLE V PER CENT OF FOURTEEN HUNDRED NEW YORK SCHOOL CHILDREN ...
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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 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 mothers 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
202. lappuse - Shops of the Association for the Improvement of the Condition of the Poor in New York City...
443. lappuse - Again it seems probable, as dentists with whom I have spoken on the subject agree, that many cases of overcrowding or wide separation of teeth are due to a lack of harmony between size of jaw and size of teeth — probably due to a union of a large-jawed, large-toothed race and a small-jawed, small-toothed race. Nothing is more striking than the regular dental arcades commonly seen in the skulls of inbred native races and the irregular dentations of many children of the tremendously hybridized American.
ii. lappuse - Professor of Social Economy, University of Chicago ADJUSTING IMMIGRANT AND INDUSTRY. (In preparation) William M. Leiserson, Chairman, Labor Adjustment Boards, Rochester and New York THE IMMIGRANT PRESS AND ITS CONTROL.
84. lappuse - ... months old. The babies were grouped also according to the kind of house in which the family lived. The death rate for babies whose homes were in one-family houses was 86.1 per 1,000; in houses containing seven or more families 236.6 per 1,000. Similarly the rate showed a steady increase according to the number of persons per room. It was 123.3 per 1,000 where the family had more rooms than persons; and 245.9 where there were two or more persons per room.
vii. lappuse - Americans in fuller common understanding and appreciation to secure by means of self-government the highest welfare of all. Such Americanization should perpetuate no unchangeable political, domestic, and economic regime delivered once for all to the fathers, but a growing and broadening national life, inclusive of the best wherever found. With all our rich heritages, Americanism will develop best through a mutual giving and taking of contributions from both newer and older Americans in the interest...
186. lappuse - Communities where the birth rate exceeds 25 per thousand invariably have a large foreign population. Communities having a large proportion of native-born, invariably have a birth rate under 25 per thousand. In New York State 73.1 per cent of all births to foreign-born women were to Italian, Russian and AustroHungarian mothers. These races accounted for nearly 25 per cent of all births in the state outside of New York City, although they furnished less than 7 per cent of the population. That mortality...
439. lappuse - ... a 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 a fair opportunity.
31. lappuse - Probably the most far-reaching investigation which has compared the physical fitness of the native and foreign born is that made by the War Department in selecting drafted men for the army. The large numbers involved make the results reliable. To understand the statistics which are here cited it is necessary to know the definitions which the War Department gave to Groups A and D among the men examined.1 Group A was composed of men who are vigorous and without any physical defect which might interfere...
72. lappuse - I know that the idea prevalent among Americans is that the alien imports his slums with him to the detriment of his adopted country, that the squalor and the misery and the filth of the foreign quarters in the large cities of the United States are characteristic of the native life of the peoples who live in those quarters. But that is an error and a slander. The slums are emphatically not of our making. So far is the immigrant from being accustomed to such living conditions that the first thing that...
83. lappuse - Or that in the homes of 496 live-born babies where bathtubs were found the infant mortality rate was 72.6, while it was more than double, or 164.8, where there were no bathtubs. Desirable as a bathtub and bodily cleanliness may be, this does not prove that the lives of the babies were saved by the presence of the tub or the assumed cleanliness of the persons having them.