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TABLE

XXIII. Infant mortality in European countries,

1908

XXIV. Death rates from affections connected with pregnancy, 1900

PAGE

185

186

XXV. Days in bed after delivery of cases cared for by midwives, New York City, 1912-19 189

XXVI. Births attended by midwives in New York
State, according to the nativity of the
mothers, 1916

XXVII. Fee rates for delivery of 285 cases, New
York City, 1912–19

XXVIII. Death rates per 1,000 births for infants at-
tended at birth by midwives, physicians,
and hospitals, 1915-16-17

XXIX. The kinds of maternity care secured by patients of various races in New York, 1903-18

XXX. Number and per cent of 1,055 cases treated by the Central Free Dispensary, Rush Medical College, by nationality

XXXI. Number and per cent of 3,536 New York City cases using hospitals and dispensaries, by nationality

XXXII. Outstanding problems of the foreign born in industry, mentioned by seventy industrial physicians

XXXIII. Comparison of the weight and height of

children of different ages living in Bourne-
ville and Birmingham, England

197

202

214

231

331

333

348

362

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE

Frontispiece

What Way of Teaching Immigrants Habits of Health
is More Effective in America?
Immigrants First Go to Live in Crowded Districts and
Old Houses

73

In Peasant Countries Bathing and Washing were Done
Out of Doors

86

Is It Any Wonder It Takes Time to Learn to Use a
Bathtub?

87

In Europe Garbage and Waste were Burned or Fed to the Animals

118

In America Disposal of Refuse is a Public Function

119

The Immigrants Lived, Worked, and Played Out of
Doors in Europe

125

Development Needed in Maternity Care

227

Nurse Must Relieve the Doctor in Caring for Many
Babies Born

237

In Europe the Milk Supply was in the Front Yard

250

In America Milk from a Distance Makes New Re

quirements

251

Temporary Shanties May Be the Only Homes for Immigrants in Mining Communities

369

Community Equipment for Health Education

411

INTRODUCTION

THE purpose of this book is to help interrelate the socalled Americanization movement in the United States with the many efforts toward the betterment of health conditions and the improvement of facilities for the care and prevention of disease. Americanization should include interplay between native and foreign born in all the important aspects of life, including the care and promotion of health. Therefore, the physicians, nurses, social workers, and administrators who are professionally concerned with medical and health work need to study people as well as technique, and adapt the policies and methods of their work to psychological as well as technical conditions.

The larger part of the book has been written by the undersigned, as chief of that division of the Americanization Study entitled Health Standards and Care. The writer accepts general responsibility for the book as a whole, due credit being given in this preface to the members of the staff or to co-operating specialists for the responsible parts which they have taken in collecting and summarizing material for particular parts of the book.

Miss Linda James was general assistant to the chief of this division of this study during the year and a half of its course. She is especially responsible for gathering the material on industrial medicine in relation to the foreign born, and for the statistical

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