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ARTICLE |

"PREVENTABLE" ACCIDENTAL AND OTHER DEATHS

JAMA. 1949;140(4):408. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02900390040009.
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ABSTRACT

Among the many unsupported claims made by the Federal Security Administrator in his promotion of a compulsory health insurance program is the reduction of the number of accidental deaths annually in this country from 100,000 to 60,000, or by 40 per cent. Above the artist's sketch opposite page one of his report to the President ("The Nation's Health—a Ten Year Program") he states: "Goal: Keep them Living—we have the knowledge to prevent 325,000 deaths each year." Thus the Administrator claims that the number of deaths each year can be reduced from the present 1.4 million to 1.1 million, which would be less than the number of deaths in the United States in any year in the twentieth century.

Obviously this reduction cannot be accomplished in an increasing and aging population because the total number dying each year in any nation depends on the number of people, their ages and the

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