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BERLIN

JAMA. 1929;93(13):1003-1004. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710130043022.
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ABSTRACT

Venereal Diseases Most Prevalent Among the Unmarried and the Divorced  Exact figures from the national census on venereal diseases for 1927 are now being published. All patients with venereal diseases were counted who were given medical care from Nov. 15 to Dec. 14, 1927. The census (including the army and navy) was taken by 32,521 general practitioners, 1,769 specialists in skin and venereal diseases, and 3,558 institutions (hospitals and dispensaries); 30,325 of these censors gave negative reports. The data show that only one fifth of the physicians and institutions admitted new patients with venereal diseases during the period considered. There were 26,941 patients (18,485 men and 8,456 women) who within one month presented themselves for medical care for the first time. From these figures and from previous experiences, it is estimated that 370,000 individuals annually contract venereal disease. If one considers the distribution of venereal diseases according to the social

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