If all the members of Congress made a tour of the tenement districts of New York or other large cities, saw the overworked fathers and overbred mothers, the ragged, ill-nourished and oftentimes diseased children, inquired into the total earnings of the family and the necessary expenses, ate of their bread and breathed their air, if our congressmen did this, then the fate of the law as it now stands would be sealed. But our congressmen are not going to make any such tour, they are not even going to inform themselves by study of the actual conditions, but will do something far easier by voting an appropriation for the study of hog cholera, the foot and mouth disease of cattle, the Texas cattle tick or some other measure of more apparent benefit to the people—and the congressman. To vote on appropriations like the above can not weaken the legislator, to vote to repeal the present law might lose him a large following in some communities. Yet the repeal of the present law in regard to preventives is the first step in eugenics, and without the repeal the best efforts of the best men and women will accomplish but little.—W. T. B.
Public Health Service Hospitals Curb Trachoma.
The establishing of small trachoma hospitals in localities where this contagious disease of the eyes is prevalent presents the best solution of the trachoma problem, according to the statement contained in the annual report of the Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service. The Service now has five trachoma hospitals in the three States of Kentucky, Virginia, and West Virginia, and so great has been the number of applicants for treatment that a waiting list has been established. In the past fiscal year 12,000 cases of trachoma have been treated, the larger proportion of which were cured, while those in which a cure was not effected have been greatly improved and rendered harmless to their associates. The great majority of these trachoma patients were people who lived in remote sections far removed from medical assistance, and who, but for the hospital care and treatment provided would have remained victims of the disease practically the remainder of their lives.
“When it is considered,” the report of the Service states, “that thousands of persons suffering with trachoma, a dangerous contagious disease, would otherwise remain untreated, it is realized how farreaching results have been obtained through these trachoma hospitals and the other public health work done in this connection. It would be impossible to estimate with any degree of accuracy the number of people who have been saved from contracting this communicable disease by thus removing these thousands of foci of infection.”
In addition to treating persons with the disease the hospitals have been used for educational work. Doctors and nurses have visited the homes of the patients and have explained how to prevent the development and recurrence of the disease. One thousand three hundred and eight such visits were made during the year in Kentucky alone. “It has taken some time,” the report continues, “to educate the people afflicted with this disease to the importance of cleanliness and the use of simple hygienic measures in their daily life.” That results have been obtained is evidenced by the noticeably better observance of hygienic precautions by those among whom the work has been done.
In addition to the hospital work, surveys were made in sixteen counties in Kentucky, especially among school children. Eighteen thousand and sixteen people were examined, 7 per cent being found to have trachoma. Similar inspections in certain localities of Arizona, Alabama, and Florida resulted in finding the disease present in from three to six children out of every hundred. Periodic examination of school children for the disease and the exclusion of the afflicted from the public schools, are two of the recommendations the Public Health Service lays emphasis upon.
One of the special features of the trachoma work was the giving of lectures and clinics before medical societies in various counties where trachoma hospitals could not be established. Patients were operated upon in the presence of physicians and the most modern methods of treatment demonstrated. Throughout, the purpose has been to stimulate local interest in taking up the campaign to eradicate trachoma.
How the Government is Meeting the Malaria Problem.
Four per cent of the inhabitants of certain sections of the South have malaria. This estimate, based on the reporting of 204,881 cases during 1914, has led the United States Public Health Service to give increased attention to the malaria problem, according to the annual report of the Surgeon General. Of 13,526 blood specimens examined by Government officers during the year, 1,797 showed malarial infection. The infection rate among white persons was above 8 per cent, and among colored persons 20 per cent. In two counties in the Yazoo Valley, forty out of every one hundred inhabitants presented evidence of the disease.
Striking as the above figures are they are not more remarkable than those relating to the reduction in the incidence of the disease following surveys of the Public Health Service at thirty-four places in nearly every State of the South. In some instances from an incidence of fifteen per cent, in 1914, a reduction has been accomplished to less than 4 or 5 per cent in 1915.