Annual Report of the State Board of Health of the State of Kansas, Volume 8State Board of Health, 1893 |
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Results 1-5 of 23
Page 36
... Kentucky : ( 4 ) Should State Boards of Health be charged with the administration of medical - practice laws ? Proposed by the State Board of Health of Louisiana : ( 5 ) What should be the relations of State and County Boards of Health ...
... Kentucky : ( 4 ) Should State Boards of Health be charged with the administration of medical - practice laws ? Proposed by the State Board of Health of Louisiana : ( 5 ) What should be the relations of State and County Boards of Health ...
Page 66
... Kentucky , Missouri , or Illinois . I have lived in and practiced medicine in all three , and served nearly a year in and during the war with Mexico . I think we have , by far , the healthiest country I ever lived in . " A complaint ...
... Kentucky , Missouri , or Illinois . I have lived in and practiced medicine in all three , and served nearly a year in and during the war with Mexico . I think we have , by far , the healthiest country I ever lived in . " A complaint ...
Page 126
... Kentucky . Such a line of inspection and dis- infection would not be extremely expensive ; I do not think it would cost more than would six cases of cholera in the city of Detroit or in Chicago . If cholera were to occur in the country ...
... Kentucky . Such a line of inspection and dis- infection would not be extremely expensive ; I do not think it would cost more than would six cases of cholera in the city of Detroit or in Chicago . If cholera were to occur in the country ...
Page 248
... Kentucky , Dr. Pinck- ney Thompson , president of the Kentucky State Board , was called to the chair . The secretary , C. O. Probst , telegraphed that he was unable to come on account of an outbreak of small - pox in Ohio . Doctor ...
... Kentucky , Dr. Pinck- ney Thompson , president of the Kentucky State Board , was called to the chair . The secretary , C. O. Probst , telegraphed that he was unable to come on account of an outbreak of small - pox in Ohio . Doctor ...
Page 276
... Kentucky . 1875 Miami Medical College . Illinois .. 1883 Ohio 1861 Canada .. 22 25 Ohio 65 Kentucky 35 Canada .. 12 Wisconsin .. Ohio 25 Pennsylvania 23 35 Pennsylvania 62 32 66 69 38 42 36 Missouri Illinois .. 12 16 31 Missouri 55 New ...
... Kentucky . 1875 Miami Medical College . Illinois .. 1883 Ohio 1861 Canada .. 22 25 Ohio 65 Kentucky 35 Canada .. 12 Wisconsin .. Ohio 25 Pennsylvania 23 35 Pennsylvania 62 32 66 69 38 42 36 Missouri Illinois .. 12 16 31 Missouri 55 New ...
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abated America Ann Arbor Atchison births Board of Health building cattle cent Chicago cholera Cincinnati Coffey Coffey county College Physicians complaint contagious diseases county attorney County Board County Commissioners County Health Officer County number deaths delinquent diphtheria disinfection Doctor duty Eclectic Medical College Eclectic Medical Institute Ellis County epidemic Geary County grippe Hahnemann Medical College Health Board unorganized Homeopathic hospital Indiana infectious inmates of poor-house Iowa Jefferson Medical College Johnson Kansas City Kentucky Keokuk Kingman Labette Leavenworth Louis Marion matter mayor Midwives mild Missouri Medical College nuisance Ohio Ohio Medical College Osage outbreak Pawnee County Pennsylvania Philadelphia Physicians and Surgeons practice present prevailing diseases prisoners in jail privy probate judge public health quarantine REGISTRATION OF PHYSICIANS reply Rush Medical College sanitary condition scarlet fever Secretary sickness small-pox tion town typhoid fever undertakers vaccination Wabaunsee water supply whooping-cough Wichita York city
Popular passages
Page 263 - This is true, for example, as regards the sulphate of iron or copperas, a salt which has been extensively used with the idea that it is a valuable disinfectant. As a matter of fact, sulphate of iron in saturated solution does not destroy the vitality of disease germs, or the infecting power of material containing them. This salt is, nevertheless, a very valuable antiseptic, and its low price makes it one of the most available agents for the arrest of putrefactive decomposition in privy vaults, etc.
Page 70 - ... a strong coffin or casket encased in a hermetically sealed (soldered) zinc, copper, or tin case, and all enclosed in a strong outside wooden box of material not less than one inch thick. In all cases the outside box must be provided with four iron chest handles.
Page 263 - Popularly, the term disinfection is used in a much broader sense. Any chemical agent which destroys or masks bad odors, or which arrests putrefactive decomposition, is spoken of as a disinfectant; and in the absence of any infectious disease it is common to speak of disinfecting a foul cesspool, or bad smelling stable, or privy vault.
Page 249 - Dr. Henry B. Baker, Secretary of the Michigan State Board of Health, a...
Page 263 - of the same class as that to which disease germs belong, and the agents which destroy the latter also destroy the bacteria of putrefaction, when brought in contact with them in sufficient quantity, or restrain their development when present in smaller amounts. "A large number of the proprietary 'disinfectants...
Page 70 - ... of mercury as above, and placed in a strong coffin or casket, and said 'coffin or casket encased in a hermetically sealed (soldered) zinc, copper, or tin case, and all enclosed in a strong outside wooden box of material not less than one inch and a half thick. RULE 3. In cases of contagious, infectious, or communicable diseases, the body must not be accompanied by articles which have been exposed to the infection of the disease.
Page 262 - Outer garments of wool or silk, and similar articles, which would be injured by immersion in boiling water or in a disinfecting solution : (1) Exposure to dry heat at a temperature of 110° C. (230° F.) for two hours.
Page 70 - State; when encased in a sound coffin or metallic case, and inclosed in a strong wooden box, securely fastened so it may be safely handled. But when it is proposed to transport them out of the State...
Page 235 - SECTION 1. Institutions for the benefit of the insane, blind, and deaf and dumb, and such other benevolent institutions as the public good may require, shall be fostered and supported by the State, subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by law.
Page 253 - The sizing used to lay on the colors of wall paper, fills the pores of the paper so as to nearly prevent the passage of air, even when we blow forcibly ; but with the additional paste used to fasten the paper on the wall, the papered wall becomes impervious to air. Over the plastered mouth of this pipe I have pasted some thin wall paper ; it is now dry, but you see I cannot blow the least air through it. A papered wall is a strangled wall so far as wall-respiration is concerned.