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ARTICLE |

Compulsory Notification of Tuberculosis.

Henry B. Baker
JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(12):742. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450640056019.
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ABSTRACT

Lansing, Mich., Sept. 7, 1899.

To the Editor:  —Referring to the paragraph on page 611, of your issue for Sept. 2, 1899, permit me to suggest that isolation of patients and placarding of premises need not follow notification; but notification is essential for any action by the people, that is by the state, for gaining any knowledge of the actual conditions and circumstances under which tuberculosis is spread, and it is for such purposes that the Michigan State Board of Health has taken action; and for the additional purpose of placing in the hands of persons who cough and of their friends some brief suggestions tending to teach the patient how to avoid re-infection and the spreading of the disease to others. Extensive observation at morgues in large cities has proved that even a large proportion of persons dead from other causes have recovered from tubercular disease of the lungs;

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