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ARTICLE |

FATALITIES OF THE FOURTH.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(4):233. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450560053012.
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ABSTRACT

The fatality statistics of the Fourth of July are generally a striking item in the newspapers for a day or two after the anniversary, but the matter is then generally dropped. This year, contrary to the usual custom, the Chicago Tribune is keeping up the record and reporting the later as well as the immediate fatalities. In its issue of July 17 it gives a list of 144 deaths directly due to Fourth of July casualties, and another journal editorially remarks that in no Philippine battle has the American death-rate been anything approaching these figures. The chief medical point of interest is the very general prevalence of lockjaw after these accidents, 83 of the 144 deaths having been due to this cause. In New York, Boston, Pittsburg, and Philadelphia all the deaths reported were from this cause, while it was only a little less unusual in several other large cities.

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