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ARTICLE |

BILIBID PRISON SANITATION

EDWIN C. SHATTUCK, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(3):175-181. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.25420290001001.
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The subject of prison sanitation is such a comprehensive one and presents so many points for consideration that I have thought best in the present paper to discuss briefly such subjects as have seemed most pertinent.

Unless there is complete isolation, a thing usually impossible, the population in the vicinity of a prison or other public institution is endangered by insanitary conditions or epidemics occurring in the institution. On the other hand, it is frequently the case that the only way by which infection can gain an entrance to the institution is from or through the neighboring population. It is clear then that it is to the interest of both to cooperate to prevent conditions inimical to public health. Since we know that sometimes in spite of every precaution epidemics do arise, the rational procedure is to join hands in the work of stamping them out.

The remarkable reduction in

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