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The Health Master

Chapter 5: INTRODUCTORY NOTE
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About This Book

A devoted public-health official moves through a series of illustrated episodes to teach practical disease prevention and sanitation. Vignettes show interventions in households, schools, clinics, and city institutions, examining isolation of contagious cases, the duties of physicians and citizens, inspection and sanitary reform, and pitfalls like unregulated drug sellers. Combining storytelling with expert-informed guidance, the work presents pragmatic public-health measures, emphasizes hygiene and organized municipal action, and urges education and prevention while acknowledging areas of medical uncertainty.

Contents

INTRODUCTORY NOTE
I. THE CHINESE PLAN PHYSICIAN
II. IN TIME OF PEACE
III. REPAIRING BETTINA
IV. THE CORNER DRUG-STORE
V. THE MAGIC LENS
VI. THE RE-MADE LADY
VII. THE RED PLACARD
VIII. HOPE FOR THE HOPELESS
IX. THE GOOD GRAY DOCTOR
X. THE HOUSE THAT CAUGHT COLD
XI. THE BESIEGED CITY
XII. PLAIN TALK

INTRODUCTORY NOTE

To dogmatise on questions of medical practice is to invite controversy and tempt disaster. The highest wisdom of to-day may be completely refuted by to-morrow’s discovery. Therefore, for the simple principles of disease prevention and health protection which I have put into the mouth of my Health Master, I make no claim of finality. In support of them I maintain only that they represent the progressive specialized thought of modern medical science. So far as is practicable I have avoided questions upon which there is serious difference of belief among the authorities. Where it has been necessary to touch upon these, as, for example, in the chapter on methods of isolation in contagious diseases, a question which arises sooner or later in every household, I have advocated those measures which have the support of the best rational probability and statistical support.

Not only has the book been prepared in consultation with the recognized authorities on public health and preventive medicine, but every chapter has been submitted to the expert criticism of specialists upon the particular subject treated. My own ideas and theories I have advanced only in such passages as deal with the relation of the physician and of the citizen to the social and ethical phases of public health. To the large number of medical scientists, both public and private, whose generous aid and counsel have made my work possible, I gratefully acknowledge my debt. My thanks are due also for permission to reprint, to the Delineator, in which most of the chapters have appeared serially; to Collier’s Weekly, and to the Ladies’ Home Journal.

The Author.