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ARTICLE |

Training for Public Health Officers

A. C. Abbott, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(14):1122. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02540400048014.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —In The Journal, Feb. 20, 1909, appears an excellent and timely article by Dr. J. W. Kerr of the U. S. Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service, on "The Municipality and Its Relations to Transmissible Diseases." In that article (page 610) the author deplores the fact that the systematic, practical teaching of hygiene, sanitation or preventive medicine, as it may be called, has been and is conspicuous by its absence from the curricula of American schools.He states: "There is now practically no provision for such advanced study, and no institution in our country offers a course leading to the granting of the degree of doctor of public health." It was that statement that called forth this communications.For a number of years the University of Pennsylvania has recognized the need for trained men in public-health work. Just how to meet the requirements could not, a priori, be

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