Biennial Report, Volume 5 |
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Results 6-10 of 28
Page 41
... effects caused by one may be very transient ; those of another protracted . Something may depend on the soil in which the germs are sown ; in one case all the conditions may be favorable , in another but in part suitable to the ...
... effects caused by one may be very transient ; those of another protracted . Something may depend on the soil in which the germs are sown ; in one case all the conditions may be favorable , in another but in part suitable to the ...
Page 50
... effect is to increase excretion , but this is soon succeeded by suppression of function , with the consequences above mentioned . ence . GENERAL PREVENTABLE CAUSES OF TYPHOID . Typhoid has been considered above all others a filth ...
... effect is to increase excretion , but this is soon succeeded by suppression of function , with the consequences above mentioned . ence . GENERAL PREVENTABLE CAUSES OF TYPHOID . Typhoid has been considered above all others a filth ...
Page 51
... effect the destruction of adherent germs and spores . Nurses and attendants should be obliged to pay the most careful ... effects of this system in full detail : for example-- the Ohio river flows between , and furnishes the supply of ...
... effect the destruction of adherent germs and spores . Nurses and attendants should be obliged to pay the most careful ... effects of this system in full detail : for example-- the Ohio river flows between , and furnishes the supply of ...
Page 53
... effects on health , cannot be disputed , but specific diseases are not thus produced . The real effects of such gases consist in deterioration of the blood , and of the nutrition in general , and con- sequently , derangement of the ...
... effects on health , cannot be disputed , but specific diseases are not thus produced . The real effects of such gases consist in deterioration of the blood , and of the nutrition in general , and con- sequently , derangement of the ...
Page 56
... effect in lessening or increasing the susceptibility to the action of the Typhoid germ . The greatest number of cases occur between the ages of twenty and thirty years . This decennium has twice the number of victims compared with those ...
... effect in lessening or increasing the susceptibility to the action of the Typhoid germ . The greatest number of cases occur between the ages of twenty and thirty years . This decennium has twice the number of victims compared with those ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid adopted animal Appendix-Potable Water attending physician Attorney-general authority Bacteria become Board of Health body carbonic chapter one hundred Cholera clerk committee contagious disease contain coupling cars court dangerous death Decisions deemed desquamation Diphtheria disease germs disinfection duty effects enforce epidemic eruption especially Fever-Its Preventable Causes filtering filth forty days germs health officer human hundred and fifty-one impurities infected infectious diseases injurious insane Iowa J. F. KENNEDY jurisdiction liable living local board micro-organisms microbe milk MOINES naptha necessary nuisance organic matter Oxford Junction oxidation patients persons plaintiff poison pollution Potable Water premises produced public health public schools purified quarantine removed result rules and regulations safety salicylic acid sanitary Scarlet Fever Secretary sewer sewer gas sick Small-pox soil statute symptoms thousand tion town township Tuberculosis Typhoid Fever Typhoid Fever-Its Preventable Typhoid germ Tyrotoxicon vaccination water supply
Popular passages
Page 143 - The local boards shall also regulate all fees and charges of persons employed by them in the execution of the health laws and of their own regulations.
Page ix - It shall be the duty of the Board of Health to prepare such forms for the record of births, marriages and deaths, as they may deem proper; the said forms to be furnished by the Secretary of said Board to the...
Page 103 - ... been approved by the state or provincial health authorities having jurisdiction where such body is disinterred, and the consent of the health authorities of the locality to which the corpse is consigned has first been obtained; and...
Page 126 - The use of carpets, rugs, etc., ought always to be avoided. 3. Do not fail to wash thoroughly the eating utensils of a person suspected of having consumption as soon after eating as possible, using boiling water for the purpose.
Page xii - Such justice shall thereupon issue a warrant directed to the sheriff or any constable of the county, commanding him to take sufficient aid, and being accompanied by two or more members of said board of health between the hours of sunrise and sunset...
Page 102 - ... 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.
Page ix - The State Board of Health shall have the general supervision of the interests of the health and life of the citizens of the State.
Page xi - State, relative to the fencing of railroads; and actions to recover such damages may be instituted before any justice of the peace or other court of competent jurisdiction.
Page x - ... all births and deaths which may come under their supervision, with a certificate of the cause of death, and such other facts as the board may require, in the blank forms furnished, as hereinafter provided.
Page 124 - It is, furthermore, to be remembered that consumption is not always, as was formerly supposed, a fatal disease, but that it is in very many cases a distinctly curable affection. An individual who is well on the road to recovery may, if he does not with the greatest care destroy his sputum, diminish greatly his chances of recovery by self-inoculation. While the greatest danger of the spread of the disease from the sick to the well is in private houses and in hospitals, yet, if this danger is thoroughly...