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WHOOPING COUGH FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF PUBLIC HEALTH

CHARLES R. GRANDY, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(26):2094-2096. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.25420520008002a.
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Whooping cough has so long been treated by the laity and also by some physicians as a joke that I would hesitate to bring the subject to your attention, if I did not feel that it is high time for the medical profession to put aside this erroneous idea and give serious thought to checking this large source of infant mortality. That there is some excuse for the popular impression that whooping cough is not a serious disease is shown by the following quotation from one of the older editions of Strumpell's "Text-Book of Medicine.":

The prognosis is favorable with the majority of children, if they are previously strong and healthy. Very young children are in more danger than older ones. There is danger if secondary pneumonia develops and if the general nutrition and strength of the child suffer.

This is the teaching I received in college, and it is

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