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USES AND LIMITATIONS OF SANATORIUMS FOR THE TUBERCULOUS

BENJAMIN GOLDBERG, M.D.
JAMA. 1929;93(8):586-588. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710080012006.
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From a public health standpoint the sanatorium of today, with its limited number of beds in comparison to the large number of persons having tuberculosis, is not as important a factor as it was originally thought to be in the control of tuberculosis. Hospitalization of every active case of tuberculosis in the United States would necessitate an increase of 500 per cent in sanatorium and hospital facilities. There never has been and never should be a sufficient number of sanatorium beds for the care of every patient with tuberculosis. The cost would be prohibitive and the results achieved would not be commensurate with the expenditure.

In the registered area of the United States in 1927, there were 87,567 deaths from tuberculosis. On the basis of five active cases for each death, an underestimate rather than overestimate, there are at present in the United States 437,835 active cases of tuberculosis. There

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