Public health reports. Public health reports, v. 36, no. 35-39; Sept. 2-30, 1921.
Publication Title:
Public health reports. Public health reports, v. 36, no. 35-39; Sept. 2-30, 1921.
Display Title:
Public health reports. Public health reports, v. 36, no. 35-39; Sept. 2-30, 1921.
Corporate Agency Authors:
Public Health Service and Treasury Department
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:
[xix]+2095-2455 p. il.
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. 35. Paratyphoid fever, report of outbreak in Cascade, Mont., caused by head cheese; by Fred T. Foard and T. F. Walker.—National Health Council; by H. S. Cumming.—Two years of fighting venereal diseases, summary of accomplishments of Public Health Service and State boards of health.—No. 36. Variations in case fatality, during influenza epidemic of 1918; by Edgar Sydenstricker.— Control of venereally diseased persons in interstate commerce; by David Robinson.— Carbon monoxide poisoningin closed garages.—Report of human plague case in San Benito County, Calif.; by W. T. Harrison.—Semiannual meeting of American Conference on Hospital Service [at West Baden, Ind., Sept. 12-16, 1921].—No. 37. Typhoid outbreak originating in carrier, outbreak on steamship shows importance of thorough examination before discharge of typhoid patients; by W. T. Harrison.—Value of certain inquiries on venereal disease case reports, study of 8,413 case reports in Indiana.— National Board of Medical Examiners, brief review of its work and announced change in plan of examination.—No. 38. Syphilis and infant death; by Millard Knowlton.— Antityphoid vaccination; by Thomas G. Hull.—No. 39. Notifiable diseases, prevalence during 1920 in cities of 10,000 to 100,000, anthrax, cerebrospinal meningitis, diphtheria, influenza, malaria, measles, pellagra, pneumonia (all forms), poliomyelitis (infantile paralysis), rabies in animals, rabies in man, scarlet fever, smallpox, tuberculosis (all forms and pulmonary), typhoid fever, and typhus fever, cases and deaths reported, 1920, indicated case and death rates per 1,000 population, fatality rates per 100 cases, and median number of cases reported during preceding years.
NOTE.—This publication is distributed gratuitously 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).