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Teaching Health IN Fargo.

JAMA. 1929;93(4):324. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710040076037.
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ABSTRACT

The Commonwealth Fund lent the city of Fargo a well trained staff of health workers. They demonstrated a program of interrelated health activities and financed the work until the community was ready to absorb it. The early steps were described in parts I, II and III of the report. Part IV is one of the best contributions to the literature of health teaching that has appeared. Miss Brown profited from the general health campaign in the city to introduce health training into the public and parochial schools. This she did with unusual tact, basing her plan of attack on the best modern individual and social psychology. She was not hampered by a fixed course of study. Health routines, consisting of the continuous observation of the individual child, a health habit record, health inspection, taking of height and weight, relating health behavior to growth and serving milk at school, were the

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Country-Specific Mortality and Growth Failure in Infancy and Yound Children and Association With Material Stature

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