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HEALTH PROBLEMS IN EDUCATION

JAMA. 1959;170(12):1422-1423. doi:10.1001/jama.1959.03010120058015.
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ABSTRACT

THE fitness of youth has interested the American physician for a long time. At the first American Medical Association meeting in 1848 a standing committee was established to "present an annual report" on a number of items, among which were educational institutions "and their relations to the laws of life." Thirty years later a committee of the Association further resolved that medical men ought to have a voice in the health aspects of the construction and location of public school buildings. The committee also felt physicians should have something to say about the age at which children should be admitted, the hours of study, and the general management of these institutions as these relate to health and expressed the belief that one or more physicians should serve on boards of education, boards of trustees, and similar boards having control of education and schools.

Among the instrumentalities for carrying out this

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