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About The united American : a magazine of good citizenchip. (Portland, Or.) 1923-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1925)
MARCH, 1925 THE UNITED AMERICAN Page Seventeen Safeguarding the Health of Three Million People in One City By Dr. HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, Health Commissioner of the City of Chicago AVERAGE individual must have T HE health safeguards thrust upon him. The reason for this is that when one is well one does not think of disease. It is only when one is sick that the “whys and wherefores” of illness are brought home to the individual. Sick ness, or intimate contact with it, then, is necessary before the average person appreciates the safeguards that are thrown around 'him daily. It is very significant, however, that today there is an awakening of what we may term the “health conscience of a community.” No .matter how well edu cated, wideawake and careful an indi vidual may be, 'he is unable alone to protect his health or that of his family from some of the most serious dangers which threaten it. It makes no difference how wealthy or influential a citizen may be, he is utterly powerless adequately to insure the purity of his own water sup ply, or the proper disposal of sewage or garbage, or the .purity of the milk his children drink, or the wholesomeness of the food on his table. With the awakening of citizens to the value of 'health conservation, health is now the problem of every civilized country. There was a time when people were satisfied merely to be cured of disease. Later they realized that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.- Today we go a step further. Not only is it the function of the health department to prevent disease, but to find ways and -means of building up the body, increasing the vigor and fos tering the general welfare and happiness of the community. Some benefits necessarily follow on a continued state of good health. But the health officer must not be satisfied with these. He must always be one step ahead of his generation. He 'has the great task of se curing the co-operation of the children of the rising generation in order to per petuate 'his work, for they will control the making and the enforcement of the health laws of tomorrow. Universal community hygiene and co-operative health conservation, for all and by all, is what the health officer hopes to attain. The health officer is constantly fight ing disease from within and without. In a community as large as Chicago, made up of varied elements and nationalities, it is no easy task to keep disease from developing within its confines. The close proximity of three- million people in a large and densely populated city necessarily brings conditions of crowd ing. An epidemic of contagious disease in a crowded district, if unchecked, spreads like a conflagration. Crowded habita tions are a fruitful source for the spread of contagion. As a community protection, therefore, quarantine in necessary. Quarantine con sists of confining the patient or patients within a certain prescribed area so as to prevent the spread of contagion to others. Ordinarily, in the scheme of nature, the individual is sacrificed for the whole. In health matters, however, the sick individual must be saved to prevent the spread of disease to others. In civilized communities we are our brother’s keeper in matters of health and disease. One who willfully breaks quarantine while afflicted with a con tagious disease breaks the fundamental laws of health and becomes a virtual murderer if others die as a result of his law-breaking. Eternal vigilance is the price of health safety. The health officer must be con stantly on’ the watch to prevent sick persons from entering 'his territory and becoming the starting point of an epidemic. There is now an understands ing between the health departments of various cities and states regarding the breaking of quarantine and escaping from one city to another of those affected with a contagious disease. The co-operation of the railroads is a great aid. in controlling the transportation of contagion from place to place. But in spite of precautions there are some who elude the vigilance of the health authori ties, enter the city and become a menace to certain parts thereof. Water and milk are two essentials to life and health, -and unfortunately if not watched may become -the carriers of disease and death. Typhoid fever is a water-born disease. Water contami nated by sewage conveys typhoid -in fection. In a large city like Chicago the sewage problem is a difficult one. In fact, it has not been completely mastered here, nor can- the water supply be made completely free from contami nation, in view of the fact that there are boats plying within the water supply and bathing beaches and summer colonies along neighboring shores. Pending the attainment of the mille- nium of an uncontaminated water sup ply, the water of Chicago is treated with chlorine gas to destroy the germs of sewage. Weighed against occasional slight unpleasantness of taste of the water, is the fact that the chlorine treat ment -has materially ' reduced typhoid fever in -the city. Chicago’s water is safe. Milk also is brought from the outside and delivered each day to the consumer in the city. It is a .favorite culture material for germ life and such deseases as diphtheria, -scarlet fever, typhoid fever and others are conveyed by it. The source of the milk supply must be constantly watched. We know where every ounce of milk comes from and how it is handled and prepared for the consumer. The children of Chicago are being protected, as far as is human ly possibly, from the death dealing diseases spread by milk. A carrier is an individual who has recovered from a contagious disease, but still harbors the germs of the in fection and is capable of transmitting it to others. The spread of typhoid fever in a community often starts from a carrier who, in some way, contami nates water or food consumed in that district. Typhoid carriers are 'guarded against with great difficulty. In Chicago every effort is made to locate them by suitable laboratory tests and when typhoid fever gets an unexplained start in a locality, the health officer always tries to trace a possible carrier. Diphtheria also is a disease that is spread more or less by carriers. In Chicago no individual suffering from diphtheria or who -has 'been in contact with diphtheria is released until his throat cultures give negative findings; but even :so, there is still a too high diphtheria incidence. There -is no question of the efficiency of vaccination as a preventive against smallpox. In civilized countries where there’ is -the least semblance of health •law, smallpox -has been- reduced from a death-dealing scourge -that once took its toll of millions, to a disease of little practical importance. A few sporadic cases occur in the well-vaccinated com munities and-, under these circumstances, the disease is confined to the unvac cinated. Careful supervision of the health of children has yielded results that more than justify its existence. In fact, it is today an essential measure of. health protection. The examination of child ren has done much toward reducing the number of contagious diseases among school children and has brought a re duction in deaths of children. Physical examinations are recognized today as a necessary adjunct to the school life of the child. By this means physical defects and weaknesses are brought to light, and proper correction of these builds up resistance against the diseases of childhood, lays the, founda tions of good health in adult life, and insures a longer life expectancy. We have gone a step further than this in the infant welfare stations. Here the infants are watched from the day of their birth, and results show a materially lowered infant mortality rate. These are but a few of the activities of a health department. The community is now ripe for -the proper sort of health education and publicity. The general public is becoming more and more in terested in health matters, and, as I said before, health propaganda is arous ing not only a -health conscience, but a health coneiousness. The general pub lic -has began to realize -that there are ways and means 'by which- it may stave off the inevitable visit of the undertaker. This is shown by an ever-increasing demand for regular periodic health examinations. Industrial plants -also have learned the value of well workmen. They know too the tremendous -loss produced by avoidable or preventable -sickness. They ■have done much toward safeguarding the workman and even forcing good health upon him. The newspapers 'are taking (Continued On Page 19) Place Your Orders With The United American Advertisers—and Tell Them Why