Annual report of the Commissioner of the Michigan Department of Health for the fiscal year ending ... 1904State Department of Health, 1905 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 47
Seite v
... Pneumonia in Michigan in 1903 .. 106-107 Consumption in Michigan in 1903 . 107-124 Meningitis in Michigan in 1903 . Typhoid fever in Michigan in 1903 .. Diphtheria and croup in Michigan in 1903 . Whooping - cough in Michigan in 1903 ...
... Pneumonia in Michigan in 1903 .. 106-107 Consumption in Michigan in 1903 . 107-124 Meningitis in Michigan in 1903 . Typhoid fever in Michigan in 1903 .. Diphtheria and croup in Michigan in 1903 . Whooping - cough in Michigan in 1903 ...
Seite vii
... pneumonia , consumption , meningitis , typhoid fever , diphtheria , whooping - cough , scarlet fever , rötheln , measles , smallpox , and other communicable diseases , including chicken - pox , erysipelas , tetanus ( lock- jaw ) , mumps ...
... pneumonia , consumption , meningitis , typhoid fever , diphtheria , whooping - cough , scarlet fever , rötheln , measles , smallpox , and other communicable diseases , including chicken - pox , erysipelas , tetanus ( lock- jaw ) , mumps ...
Seite xiv
... by 129 during 1903 than during 1902 , the numbers being 2,352 and 2,482 for the two years re- spectively . Deaths from pneumonia were 64 less during 1903 than 1902 xiv STATE BOARD OF HEALTH - REPORT OF SECRETARY , 1904 .
... by 129 during 1903 than during 1902 , the numbers being 2,352 and 2,482 for the two years re- spectively . Deaths from pneumonia were 64 less during 1903 than 1902 xiv STATE BOARD OF HEALTH - REPORT OF SECRETARY , 1904 .
Seite xv
... pneumonia were 1,720 in 1903 and 1,856 in 1904 , an increase of 136 , nearly eight per cent for the five months of 1904. The unusually cold winters and the unusually cold and wet summers of the last two years have been in some degree ...
... pneumonia were 1,720 in 1903 and 1,856 in 1904 , an increase of 136 , nearly eight per cent for the five months of 1904. The unusually cold winters and the unusually cold and wet summers of the last two years have been in some degree ...
Seite xvi
... pneumonia , and cancer . Positive knowledge concerning the prevalence of venereal diseases in Europe seems also to be quite limited . The only attempt to secure such knowledge seems to have been made by the Prussian Government , which ...
... pneumonia , and cancer . Positive knowledge concerning the prevalence of venereal diseases in Europe seems also to be quite limited . The only attempt to secure such knowledge seems to have been made by the Prussian Government , which ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
age-groups Alpena Ann Arbor annual report average age average duration average numbers Board of Health bowels Bronchitis cent of reports cent of weeks cent the deaths Cholera infantum Cholera morbus Compiled consumption counties croup dangerous communicable diseases death-rate deaths per outbreak December Diagram Diarrhea diphtheria Division Dysentery Erysipelas fatal females frosts Harrisville health officers Inflam Influenza instances isolation and disinfection July June kidney Lansing less localities males measles meningitis meteorological conditions Michigan in 1903 months in 1903 Neuralgia non-fatal number of deaths number of outbreaks Number of reported occurred order of prevalence period Pleuritis pneumonia population ported Puerperal fever Remittent fever report for 1898 reported present reports received reports stat restriction Rheumatism Sault Ste scarlet fever Secretary Sept smallpox source of contagium stations in Michigan Table temperature Thornville tion Tonsillitis Traverse City Typho-mal typhoid fever weekly reports whooping-cough
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 197 - It has long been known that small-pox: can be prevented or modified by vaccination. It is now believed that a widespread epidemic of the disease can be attributed only to an equally widespread ignorance or willfulness concerning small-pox and its prevention by vaccination.
Seite 55 - ... mind with changes in nomenclature, when drawing deductions from what has been described as the classification of the more or less reliable guesses of a large number of more or less skilled observers. Registration of sickness, if it were possible, would afford a far more efficient index of the sanitary condition of the population than the registration of deaths, which gives us simply the number of cases of sickness which ended fatally, but no idea of the duration thereof or of the number of persons...
Seite 55 - Tonsillitis, for example, is responsible for much discomfort and lost time; its prevalence has some meaning, but its death roll is exceedingly small. Rheumatism is much more widespread than mortality returns would imply; chicken-pox is relatively unimportant, but in some places its notification is required...
Seite 55 - Officers. By Charles Harrington, MD, Assistant Professor of Hygiene in the Medical School of Harvard University.
Seite viii - That there shall be taught in every year in every public school in Michigan the principal modes by which each of the dangerous communicable diseases are spread and the best methods for the restriction and prevention of each such disease.
Seite xix - An act to provide for a county poor physician for the county of Saginaw, fix his compensation, prescribe his duties, and regulate the liability of the county for the care of indigent persons affected with contagious diseases.
Seite 171 - ... portions of such cost by political subdivisions. DERIVATION: None. COMMENT For improved management made possible by a unified judicial system, the state is to pay for the costs, thus doing away with the widespread practice of having separate local courts maintained and paid for locally. Since burdens may be greater in some parts of the state than in others, and in view of the fact that local sharing of costs may be part of a state's financial structure, the Model allows the legislature to provide...
Seite 142 - ... per cent of the males and 64 per cent of the females were under thirty years of age. Table...
Seite xvi - At the recent meeting of the American Medical Association at Atlantic City, Dr.