A NEW FEATURE IN INDIGENT MEDICAL CARE
ROLLEN W. WATERSON Executive Secretary, Lake County Medical Society WHITING, IND.The history of medical relief for the indigent sick in Lake County, Ind., is a sordid tale of political intrigue, of investigations and indictments and public scandal . . . of all the abuses and inadequacies the profession has learned to expect when politics, now synonymous with government, gets control of the distribution of medical care. This year, however, certain local changes that are not important to this report have made possible the reorganization of the system, and the plan that has replaced it has reduced the cost of medical relief to approximately half last year's average and permits the indigent patient a free choice of physician.Under the Lake County plan, a referral physician, a member of the Lake County Medical Society and preferably a general practitioner, is appointed to serve each month. He is responsible to the