Hygienic Laboratory bulletin. no. 81-83, 1912, Issues 81-83U.S. Government Printing Office, 1912 |
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Page 5
... cities ... .. Typhoid fever in American cities ... 13 13 14 16 Economic loss due to typhoid fever . 18 Differences in sanitary conditions in American and European cities as an explanation of difference in rates ... Safe water supplies ...
... cities ... .. Typhoid fever in American cities ... 13 13 14 16 Economic loss due to typhoid fever . 18 Differences in sanitary conditions in American and European cities as an explanation of difference in rates ... Safe water supplies ...
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... cities for disaster in the shape of typhoid fever epidemics , with a frequency not pleasant to contemplate . Cities which neglect to filter or treat in a proper manner such polluted supplies would be exposed also to outbreaks of Asiatic ...
... cities for disaster in the shape of typhoid fever epidemics , with a frequency not pleasant to contemplate . Cities which neglect to filter or treat in a proper manner such polluted supplies would be exposed also to outbreaks of Asiatic ...
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... cities and States themselves alarm , and demand concerted effort for their reduction . The average American citizen ... cities . What may be considered a low rate for typhoid fever ? Table 1 shows the death rates per 100,000 population ...
... cities and States themselves alarm , and demand concerted effort for their reduction . The average American citizen ... cities . What may be considered a low rate for typhoid fever ? Table 1 shows the death rates per 100,000 population ...
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... cities with American cities in the basin of the Great Lakes , only cities of northern Europe have been mentioned , in order to make a fair comparison of sanitary results under climatic conditions not essentially different . For the same ...
... cities with American cities in the basin of the Great Lakes , only cities of northern Europe have been mentioned , in order to make a fair comparison of sanitary results under climatic conditions not essentially different . For the same ...
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... cities with higher rates . Typhoid fever deaths per 100,000- Cities . 1909 1910 Typhoid fever deaths per 100,000- Cities . 1909 1910 12.5 6.4 Moscow . 9.4 13.6 Warsaw 7.4 16.1 St. Petersburg . 15.7 12.2 13.9 10.3 Average .. 13.8 15.0 ...
... cities with higher rates . Typhoid fever deaths per 100,000- Cities . 1909 1910 Typhoid fever deaths per 100,000- Cities . 1909 1910 12.5 6.4 Moscow . 9.4 13.6 Warsaw 7.4 16.1 St. Petersburg . 15.7 12.2 13.9 10.3 Average .. 13.8 15.0 ...
Common terms and phrases
action of disinfectant ANNUM BY MONTHS average Bay City Benton Harbor Calumet River cells cent CHART Cheboygan Chicago cient Clair River coefficient connective tissue contamination culture exposed Detroit River dilution discharge disinfectant for minutes drainage basin Duluth enteritis epithelial Escanaba exposed to action factor feet filter plant filtration high rates insanitary JULY AUG SEP JUNE JULY AUG Lake Huron Lake Michigan Lake Ontario lipoid bodies means growth means no growth Menominee method milk Milwaukee nuclei occurred ORGANIC MATTER Phenol coeffi plasma polluted water pollution population Port Huron prevalence of typhoid privies proliferation public water supply raw water regeneration RESULTS River drainage basin Rochester safe water supply Saginaw Bay Saginaw River Sample sanitary sewage sewage disposal sewage pollution sewer outlets shore showing seasonal prevalence stained TABLE TEST WITHOUT ORGANIC tion tubes typhoid fever Typhoid fever deaths typhoid fever rate typhoid rate waterworks intake winter and spring Wyandotte
Popular passages
Page 283 - Report No. 3 on the origin and prevalence of typhoid fever in the District of Columbia.
Page 2 - Prof. William H. Welch, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. ; Prof. Simon Flexner, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York; Prof. Victor C. Vaughan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Prof. William T. Sedgwick, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass., and Prof. Frank F. Wesbrook, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. LABORATORY CORPS. Director.
Page 283 - Hymenolepis: by Ch. Wardell Stiles. No. 14. — Spotted fever (tick fever) of the Rocky Mountains; a new disease. By John F. Anderson. No. 15. — Inefficiency of ferrous sulphate as an antiseptic and germicide. By Allan J. McLaughlin.
Page 283 - LANE MEDICAL LIBRARY STANFORD UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER STANFORD, CALIFORNIA 94305 FOR RENEWAL...
Page 283 - was changed to the ' 'Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service of the United States, " and three new divisions were added to the Hygienic Laboratory. Since the change of name of the service the bulletins of the Hygienic Laboratory have been continued in the same numerical order, as follows: *No.
Page 27 - ... minutes is divided by the figure representing the degree of dilution of the weakest strength of the phenol control that kills within the same time. The same is done for the weakest strength that kills in 15 minutes. The mean of the two is the coefficient. The method of determining the coefficient will be seen in Table 17. TABLE 17. Name, "A.
Page 283 - No. 20. — A zoological investigation into the cause, transmission, and source of .Rocky Mountain "spotted fever." By Ch. Wardell Stiles. *No. 21. — The immunity unit for standardizing diphtheria antitoxin (based on Ehrlich's normal serum).
Page 32 - ... the former has four times the efficiency of the latter. The true cost of a disinfectant can only be determined by taking into consideration the phenol coefficient and the cost of the disinfectant per gallon. The cost of a disinfectant per 100 units of efficiency as compared with pure phenol is obtained by first dividing the cost per gallon of the disinfectant by the cost per gallon of pure phenol; the efficiency ratio...
Page 283 - The International Code of Zoological Nomenclature as applied to medicine. By Ch. Wardell Stiles. No. 25. — Illustrated key to the cestode parasites of man. By Ch. Wardell Stiles. No.
Page 283 - In citing these bulletins, beginning with No. 8, bibliographers and authors are requested to adopt the following abbreviations: Bull. No. , Hyg. Lab., US Pub.