Immigrant Health and the CommunityHarper & Brothers, 1921 - 481 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 38.
xv. lappuse
... Labor Camps 365 The Pioneer Mining Community 368 Summary 371 XVII . PUBLIC HEALTH WORK 376 Experiments in New York 380 Health Centers in Cleveland 384 Co - ordination in Buffalo 385 A Dispensary in Boston 386 The Social Unit Plan 387 ...
... Labor Camps 365 The Pioneer Mining Community 368 Summary 371 XVII . PUBLIC HEALTH WORK 376 Experiments in New York 380 Health Centers in Cleveland 384 Co - ordination in Buffalo 385 A Dispensary in Boston 386 The Social Unit Plan 387 ...
xxvi. lappuse
... Labor Statistics is cordially acknowledged . Dr. Harry E. Mock , presi- dent of the American Association of Industrial Physi- cians and Surgeons , generously gave much time in an advisory way to that part of the study concerned with ...
... Labor Statistics is cordially acknowledged . Dr. Harry E. Mock , presi- dent of the American Association of Industrial Physi- cians and Surgeons , generously gave much time in an advisory way to that part of the study concerned with ...
28. lappuse
... Labor Statistics , showed an annual average per member of 6.6 days of disability . The number of days of sickness ... Labor Review , November , 1919 , Bureau of Labor Statistics , U. S. Department of Labor . Illinois and Ohio commissions ...
... Labor Statistics , showed an annual average per member of 6.6 days of disability . The number of days of sickness ... Labor Review , November , 1919 , Bureau of Labor Statistics , U. S. Department of Labor . Illinois and Ohio commissions ...
62. lappuse
... , 1918 " ; Emma Duke , " Infant Mortality , Johnstown , Pennsylvania , 1915 " ; Children's Bureau , United States Department of Labor . a relatively favorable position among the foreign born in the 62 IMMIGRANT HEALTH AND COMMUNITY.
... , 1918 " ; Emma Duke , " Infant Mortality , Johnstown , Pennsylvania , 1915 " ; Children's Bureau , United States Department of Labor . a relatively favorable position among the foreign born in the 62 IMMIGRANT HEALTH AND COMMUNITY.
78. lappuse
... labor forces . Without decent and adequate housing labor could not be induced to stay long in one place , so millions were spent by the United States government to this one end . For many years , however , certain industries have felt ...
... labor forces . Without decent and adequate housing labor could not be induced to stay long in one place , so millions were spent by the United States government to this one end . For many years , however , certain industries have felt ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
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 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
ix. lappuse - THIS volume is the result of studies in methods of Americanization prepared through funds furnished by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. It arose out of the fact that constant applications were being made to the Corporation for contributions to the work of numerous 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...
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.
442. lappuse - But I am aware that I have not yet considered the main problem of the consequence of race intermixture, considering races as differing by a number of characters. First, I have to say that this subject has not been sufficiently investigated; but we may, by inference from studies that have been made, draw certain conclusions. Any well-established abundant race is probably well adjusted to its conditions and its parts and functions are harmoniously adjusted. Take the case of the Leghorn hen. Its function...
vii. lappuse - Americanization is the uniting of new with native-born 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...
202. lappuse - Shops of the Association for the Improvement of the Condition of the Poor in New York City...
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.
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...
443. lappuse - ... 10" is an inch of danger; children of insufficient circulation. On the other hand, there may appear children of short stature with too large circulatory apparatus. Despite the great capacity that the body has for self adjustment it fails to overcome the bad hereditary combinations. 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 —...
301. lappuse - Tuberculosis and the Committee on the Prevention of Tuberculosis of the Charity Organization Society of The City of New York, at the Museum of Natural History, from November 27 to December 9, 1905.