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THE CHICAGO PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE HAS A NEWSPAPER HOLIDAY

JAMA. 1929;92(16):1350-1352. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700420034011.
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ABSTRACT

Chicago has a medical issue—a problem which began like a slow growing fungus several years ago and which now, by manipulation, stimulation and intricate newspaper encouragement, has burst forth into a scarlet odoriferous blossom. The issue began with the creation of the Public Health Institute—a corporation for the treatment of venereal disease. This institution, not for profit, was developed with the aid of several Chicago philanthropists, the impelling motive announced as the application in civil life of the wholesale methods of treatment of venereal disease used in the Army only during the war. Through full-page advertisements in the press, enormous numbers of patients were secured. The director of the clinic, who, it is reported, has a strange genius for commercial details, if not a respect for established medical ethics, conceived the advertisements as necessary to building the business. Soon the practices of this corporation came afoul of medical organization. The

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