Public health reports, v. 36, no. 26-30; July 1-29, 1921.
Publication Title:
Public health reports, v. 36, no. 26-30; July 1-29, 1921.
Display Title:
Public health reports, v. 36, no. 26-30; July 1-29, 1921.
Corporate Agency Authors:
Public Health Service
Sort Author:
Public Health Service
Date:
1921
Publish Date ISO Format:
1921-01-01T00:00:00Z
Publication Start:
19210101
Publication End:
19211231
Corporate/Agency Author:
Public Health Service
Publication month:
13
Publication year:
1921
Description:
[xx]+1497-1792 p. il. 2 pl. 2 p. of pl.
Notes:
[Weekly.]
Notes:
[Weekly.] * For Sale by Superintendent of Documents. Paper, 5c. single copy. $1.50 a yr.; foreign subscription. $2.75, (subscription price on publication incorrect).
Notes:
SPECIAL ARTICLES.—No. 26, Sickness frequency among industrial employees, morbidity among group of wage earners during 1920.—Standard treatment for malaria; by C. C. Bass.—Portable cyanide gas generator for fumigating small compartments; by C. M. Fauntleroy.—Fake arsphenamine, warning to physicians and druggists.—No. 27, Sickness among school children, loss of time from school among 6,130 school children in 13 localities in Missouri; by Selwyn D. Collins.—Disinfectant testing by Hygienic Laboratory method.—No. 28, All-America Conference on Venereal Diseases, report on proceedings and resolutions of general conference committee; by Charles Bolduan.—No. 29, Difficulty in making differential diagnosis between encephalitis lethargica and botulism; by J. C. Geiger.—Direct inoculation test for B. botulinus toxin, determination of presence of B. botulinus toxin by intraperitoneal inoculation of laboratory animals with suspected foods [with list of references]; by I. A. Bengtson.—Epidemiological study of 1920 epidemic of influenza in isolated rural community; by Chas. Armstrong and Ross Hopkins.—Court decisions (relating to erection of tuberculosis hospital as nuisance, and admission of unvaccinated children to school].—No. 30, Tularæmia Francis 1921; 1. Occurrence of tularemia in nature as disease of man, by Edward Francis; [2. Experimental transmission of tularemia by flies of species Chrysops discalis, by Edward Francis and Bruce Mayne; 3, Experimental transmission of tularæmia in rabbits by rabbit louse, Hæmodipsus ventricosus (Denny), by Edward Francis and G. C. Lake].—Experience with bubonic plague (human and rodent) in Galveston. 1920; by Mark F. Boyd and T. W. Kemmerer.—Prevalence of poliomyelitis.—Principal causes of death, comparison of death rates for principal causes for Apr. and May. 1921. and for first quarters of 1919-21, in group of insured persons.
NOTE.—This publication is distributed gratuitiously to State and municipal health officers, etc., by the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service. Treasury Department. Others desiring these reports may obtain them from the Superintendent of Documents at the prices stated above.
Availability:
* For Sale by Superintendent of Documents. Paper, 5c. single copy. $1.50 a yr.; foreign subscription. $2.75, (subscription price on publication incorrect).