Monthly Bulletin of the State Board of Health of Massachusetts, Volume 5Board of Health, 1910 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 99
Page 1
... . HIRAM F. MILLS , A.M. , C.E. , LAWRENCE . MARK W. RICHARDSON , M.D. , Secretary . ** ? BOSTON : WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO . , STATE PRINTERS , 18 POST OFFICE SQUARE . 8239 ARVARD UNIVERSA ITY TED 22 1945 OF GRADUATE SCHOOL 1910 .
... . HIRAM F. MILLS , A.M. , C.E. , LAWRENCE . MARK W. RICHARDSON , M.D. , Secretary . ** ? BOSTON : WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO . , STATE PRINTERS , 18 POST OFFICE SQUARE . 8239 ARVARD UNIVERSA ITY TED 22 1945 OF GRADUATE SCHOOL 1910 .
Page 3
... Lawrence , 78,000 31 Somerville , 76,049 Brockton , 55,039 Holyoke , 53,590 Malden , 41,941 Chelsea , 40,080 11 2 ... Lawrence by the census of 1905 was 70,050 , but , owing to the building of the new Wood and Arlington mills , an ...
... Lawrence , 78,000 31 Somerville , 76,049 Brockton , 55,039 Holyoke , 53,590 Malden , 41,941 Chelsea , 40,080 11 2 ... Lawrence by the census of 1905 was 70,050 , but , owing to the building of the new Wood and Arlington mills , an ...
Page 4
... Lawrence , 78,000 35 Somerville , 76,049 25 Brockton , 55,039 11 Holyoke , 53,590 15 Malden , 41,941 14 Chelsea , 40,080 11 Newton , 39,642 Salem , 39,019 22 Haverhill , 38,362 14 Fitchburg , 34,263 7 Everett , 33,597 11 Quincy , 31,937 ...
... Lawrence , 78,000 35 Somerville , 76,049 25 Brockton , 55,039 11 Holyoke , 53,590 15 Malden , 41,941 14 Chelsea , 40,080 11 Newton , 39,642 Salem , 39,019 22 Haverhill , 38,362 14 Fitchburg , 34,263 7 Everett , 33,597 11 Quincy , 31,937 ...
Page 5
... Lawrence , Somerville , 85,516 84,623 24 84,237 37 78,000 34 76,049 33 18 ४ 10 11 Brockton , 55,039 10 Holyoke , 53,590 19 Malden , 41,941 13 Chelsea , 40,080 6 Newton , 39,642 13 Salem , 39,019 14 Haverhill , 38,362 15 Fitchburg ...
... Lawrence , Somerville , 85,516 84,623 24 84,237 37 78,000 34 76,049 33 18 ४ 10 11 Brockton , 55,039 10 Holyoke , 53,590 19 Malden , 41,941 13 Chelsea , 40,080 6 Newton , 39,642 13 Salem , 39,019 14 Haverhill , 38,362 15 Fitchburg ...
Page 6
... Lawrence , 78,000 32 10 17 11 Somerville , 76,049 26 Brockton , 55,039 9 Holyoke , 53,590 22 Malden , 41,941 13 Chelsea , 40,080 13 Newton , 39,642 16 Salem , 39,019 Haverhill , 38,362 12 Fitchburg , 34,263 8 Everett , 33,597 Quincy ...
... Lawrence , 78,000 32 10 17 11 Somerville , 76,049 26 Brockton , 55,039 9 Holyoke , 53,590 22 Malden , 41,941 13 Chelsea , 40,080 13 Newton , 39,642 16 Salem , 39,019 Haverhill , 38,362 12 Fitchburg , 34,263 8 Everett , 33,597 Quincy ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acute Lung Diseases Arlington Attleborough Barrington Bedford Beverly board of health Boston Brockton Brookline Cambridge cent Chelsea Chicopee child CITIES AND TOWNS Clinton contained added water dairies Deaths under Five Diphtheria epidemic Everett Fall River fectious Fitchburg FOOD AND DRUGS Framingham Gardner Gloucester Greenfield Haverhill Holyoke Hospital Hyde Park infantile paralysis infection INFECTIOUS DISEASES inoculation Lawrence Leominster Lowell Lynn Malden Marlborough Mass Massachusetts mated for 1909 Measles Melrose meningitis Milford Milk total solids months muscles Newburyport Newton North Adams Northampton Number Number found October Ophthalmia neonatorum patient Peabody physician Pittsfield poliomyelitis Population present Pulmonary Quincy Reported Deaths reporting towns Salem samples scarlet fever Second inspection SECTION September September 22 skimmed milk Somerville Southbridge Springfield taken ill Taunton Total number Total of reporting Tuberculosis typhoid fever U. S. P. strength vaccinated Wakefield Waltham Watertown Webster WEEK ENDING WEEKLY RETURNS Westfield Weymouth Woburn Worcester
Popular passages
Page 194 - ... inclusive, of chapter five hundred and fourteen of the acts of the year nineteen hundred and nine...
Page 54 - Pain or tenderness in the acute attack existed in 19 out of 25 recovered cases. The statement may, therefore,, be made that in the whole group of G28 cases, 10.8 per cent, were reported as wholly recovered; that in the smaller group of 150 cases, 16.7 per cent, are known to have recovered; and that a study of character of onset, distribution and tenderness in these cases gives no means of distinguishing them from other cases at the time of the attack. PREVENTION. In the matter of prevention of the...
Page 194 - Acts of 1910, provided that the law shall not apply to any factory wherein such special measures are adopted as appear to the State Inspector of Health to be reasonably practicable and meet the necessities of the case : — I.
Page 55 - ... per cent, and that 75 per cent or more of the patients surviving are permanently crippled, state boards of health and other health authorities are urged to adopt the same 'or similar measures as are already adopted and enforced in Massachusetts for ascertaining the modes of origin and manner of distribution of the disease with a view of controlling and limiting the spread of so serious an affection.
Page 119 - The Diagnosis of Infantile Paralysis in the Prodromal and Early Acute Stage, as Found in the Experimental Study of Acute Poliomyelitis in Monkeys. With Report of Findings in Four Human Cases.
Page 194 - ... sufficiently injurious to the health of minors under eighteen years of age employed therein to justify their exclusion therefrom, and every decision so rendered shall be conclusive evidence of the facts involved therein, except so far as the same may later be revoked or modified by a subsequent decision of the board.
Page 194 - ... when as a result of its investigations it finds that any particular trade, process of manufacture, or occupation, or particular method of carrying on any trade, process of manufacture, or occupation, is dangerous or injurious to the health of minors under eighteen years of age employed therein, shall have power to adopt rules and regulations prohibiting or regulating the employment of such minors therein.
Page 20 - That outbreaks of infantile paralysis have very greatly increased in several parts of the world in the last five years in a measure not to be explained in any way by the increased interest in the disease. 2. That it is more prevalent in cold than in warm countries. 3. That from the northern part of the United States have been reported more cases than from any part of the world.
Page 121 - ... In the early acute stage the increase in cells is very marked. The cells are now, however, mostly of the lymphocytic or very early form of cells, and sometimes very hard to place, as they are apparently undifferentiated cells. As the cells decrease in number the polynuclears begin to return, and at the end of a week or ten days there are very few cells present, mostly large mononuclears with a few polynuclears. In the prodromal and acute stage there was at times a fibrin clot. This clot would...
Page 20 - In the writings of the last year there is no dissent from the opinion that the disease is communicable. Direct transmission is apparently frequent, transmission by means of a healthy carrier is more than probable, and infection occasionally appears to remain in a house where the disease had previously occurred. On the other hand, the disease is evidently not very "contagious" in the ordinary acceptance of the term. In the epidemic in the Deerfield valley, in Massachusetts, in 1908, so carefully studied...