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TABLE OF CONTENTS

The Department's Roll of Honor.
EDITORIALS-The Whooping Cough Situation and the Local Health
Officer - Negligence of Some Physicians Is Costing Baby Lives -
Why Don't Communities Prevent Preventable Baby Deaths? — Schools
Must Be Equipped to Care for Children's Health - Venereal Disease
Sufferer Forbidden to Handle Food Supplies - Typhoid Prevalence Is
High but Much Can Yet Be Done - Be Ready for Poliomyelitis Epi-
demic if It Appears - People Anxious to Read Sex Hygiene Booklets -
Urban Hog-Keeping Again Calls Forth Protest - Three More De-
partment Men Enter War Service - Municipal Public Health Organi-
zation in Ohio - Now They Blame the Poor Horse for Typhoid
Fever

Sanitary Control of Milk....

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Insanitary Conditions Responsible for Another Rural Typhoid Epidemic.... 351

Report Publisehed on Sickness Survey....

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Baby-Saving in Ohio During Earlier Half of 1918..

353

Municipal Public Health Organization. By ALLEN F. GILLIHAN, M. D...... 359 Army Lowers Death Rate from Disease..

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Public Health Nursing Service - Report for June, 1918...
Give Expert Advice on Sanitary Bond Issues.....

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DEPARTMENTAL REPORTS BY DIVISIONS (JULY, 1918):
Division of Communicable Diseases - Division of Public Health Edu-
cation and Tuberculosis - Division of Laboratories - Division of
Industrial Hygiene - Division of Sanitary Engineering - Bureau
of Publicity, Division of Administration..

Foreign Babies Need Health Safeguards.....

.... 366

HEALTH OFFICERS' ROUNDTABLE - Prepare for Smallpox - Bid
Health Officials Farewell - Why Not Vaccinate? - Dr. Smedley Enters
Army Smallpox in Children's Home
Springfield Diphtheria Rate....

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Our City's Health Record

Public Health Notes From Over the State...

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The Whooping Cough Situation and the Local Health Officer

The seriousness of the whooping cough prevalence in Ohio this year is indicated in this month's report of the Division of Communicable Diseases. With the disease passing all previous records for cases and deaths, the necessity for strict enforcement of the quarantine measures provided by the new whooping cough regulations is great.

In the past nine years whooping cough has taken a toll of 4,260 lives in Ohio, 4,085 of the victims being children under five years old. The yearly death average stands at 473 and the maximum yearly total recorded is 668 for 1913. The average of reported cases for the past five years is 8,577, with 1913 having the maximum case total of 10,064.

These records, however, are insignificant by comparison with the totals thus far recorded for 1918. Case reports for the first six months of the year numbered 6,792 and July, when all delayed reports are in, will bring the total close to 8,300. That these figures indicate an actual increase in prevalence and not merely better reporting is proved by the

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