THE PEDIATRICIAN AND THE PUBLIC

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 222-227
Author(s):  
PAUL HARPER

The recommendations that federal tax funds be used for the support of pediatric education which were prepared by the Committee for Improvement of Child Health and approved by the Executive Board of the American Academy of Pediatrics are supported with the following reservations: a. The recommendations of the Academy should acknowledge the need to strengthen the entire field of medical education while maintaining the Academy's qualification to speak for the pediatric aspects. b. The recommendations should more clearly emphasize the desirability of extending medical training by an affiliation between outlying hospitals and medical centers. The purpose is more and better training in pediatrics for general practitioners as well as for pediatricians. c. The recommendations should be amended to strengthen the position of the proposed advisory council on medical education and to require that there shall be no interference with academic freedom to develop medical education and to investigate disease.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 41 (6) ◽  
pp. 1143-1144
Author(s):  
Henry P. Staub

In the Newsletter of January 1, 1968, the American Academy of Pediatrics reported that the executive board strongly endorsed time American Cancer Society's anti-smoking resolution. Personally, I cannot agree with the approach of the resolution to the public health hazard of smoking. If the American Academy of Pediatrics (or for that matter, the American Cancer Society) wanted to back effective measures, an entirely different type of resolution would have been adopted, one that would have put the emphasis On reaciling the younger generation.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 463-463
Author(s):  
M. Harr Jennison ◽  
Allan B. Coleman ◽  
Richard B. Feiertag ◽  
Robert B. Kugel ◽  
William B. Forsyth ◽  
...  

In 1938 the American Academy of Pediatrics took formal action and defined the age limits of pediatric practice as follows (Journal of Pediatrics, 13:127 and 13:266, 1938): The practice of pediatrics begins at birth and extends well into adolescence and in most cases it will terminate between the sixteenth and eighteenth year of life. In 1969, the Council on Pediatric Practice asked the Executive Board to up date this statement, and the Executive Board referred it to the Council on Child Health. After extensive review of several statements proposed by the Committee on Youth, the Council on Child Health recommended the following statement, which has been approved by the Executive Committee of the Academy for publication as official policy of the American Academy of Pediatrics. PEDIATRICS The purview of pediatrics includes the growth, development, and health of the child and therefore begins in the period prior to birth when conception is apparent. It continues through childhood and adolescence when the growth and developmental processes are generally completed. The responsibility of pediatrics may therefore begin during pregnancy and usually terminates by 21 years of age.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 512-512
Author(s):  

THE FOLLOWING is an excerpt from the Abstracts of the Executive Board Meeting of October 2 to 5, 1957, presented at the Business Meeting of the Academy during the Annual Meeting on October 9, 1957. It is published here at the request of the Executive Board. The following statement was adopted by the Board to be given to the members at the Annual Meeting by the President, transmitted to advertisers in Pediatrics by the Business Manager of Pediatrics and appear in the official publication of the Academy, Pediatrics: The American Academy of Pediatrics recognized the Physicians' Council for Information on Child Health as an independent organization engaged in a program seeking to improve the health of children. The American Academy of Pediatrics has no connection with the Physicians' Council for Information on Child Health. The two organizations are not related in any way. The American Academy of Pediatrics has no control over the Physicians' Council, its directors, executive committee, officers or members. The Academy has no special knowledge of the program, policy or actions of the Physicians' Council, other than is disclosed by the publications of the Physicians' Council. The policy of the American Academy of Pediatrics is to co-operate with any organization interested in the improvement of child health and welfare.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 560-564
Author(s):  
WM. C. BLACK

I can draw no other conclusion from this report than that the results of our survey, with which nearly every one of us cooperated wholeheartely and honestly, are immediately being perverted, distorted, twisted, and prostituted to the frank, bold, shameless, support of an idealogy as foreign to everything which has gone to make American medicine what it is today—to make America what she is today—as were the tactics and philosophy of Hitler and Mussolini. This report, which would picture the medical care of American children as grossly inadequate, can only be drawn by comparing our present real status with an ideal, unreal, Utopian, starry-eyed-dreamer's view of a never-yet-attained state of perfection. The real fact of the excellence of life for America's children and the enormous expansion of America's child care compared with that of any other country is completely ignored! The authors of this report must be either stupid, or visionary, and our Executive Board, which approved the report, must suffer from one or both of the same disastrous defects. It is up to us, the common members of the American Academy of Pediatrics, to make ourselves heard in the high places of our organization immediately and with such vigor and unanimity that this report in its entirety will be disapproved and heartily condemned, and another committee appointed which will approach this problem realistically. The approval of this damnable report by the Executive Board of the American Academy of Pediatrics places us squarely in the disgraceful, unenviable, and intolerable position of being the first organized group of reputable and honorable American physicians to endorse officially a report and recommendations which are as unAmerican as the machinations of the Kremlin. This insult to ourselves, to our fellow American Physicians, to this great free nation of ours—this desecration of LIBERTY must be promptly, decisively, and completely wiped from our record or I, for one, shall resign from the Organization. Fellow member of the once American Academy of Pediatrics, we have been most disgracefully betrayed! For all of you who see the full and hideously dangerous implications of this report I suggest the following procedures: (1) Write your opinion immediately to your District Chairman, to our President, or both, demanding an immediate emergency meeting of our Executive Board to rescind its approval of the report and then pass a strong resolution of total condemnation. (2) Send a copy of your letter to me and the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons will give nation wide publicity to the tabulated results. (3) Inform your colleagues (members and non-members of the Academy) of the nature of this report, discuss it, and publicize as widely as you can its total condemnation. For those of you who may not sense the full importance of the report I append a bibliography for your further study and enlightenment. Obtain and read this material promptly, then send in your letters as soon as possible. You may receive promptly the entire bibliography (except books 7 and 8) from the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, 360 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, at a cost of $1.35. For those of you who will not think or act I can do nothing except to hope your numbers are few and that your awakening will not be long delayed.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 62 (5) ◽  
pp. 850-850
Author(s):  
Saul J. Robinson

This year the American Academy of Pediatrics has embarked on a health promotion program which will lead to a schedule of events for its participation in the Year of the Child—1979, as proclaimed by the United Nations. It will reach a climax in 1980 with the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the American Academy of Pediatrics. The motto the Academy has adopted for this is "The Academy of Pediatrics Speaks Up for Children." A Committee under the chairmanship of Dr. Sprague Hazard, a member of the Executive Board, has organized a program which emphasizes four aspects of child health: accident prevention, nutrition, immunization, and health education.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 657-661
Author(s):  
JAMES L. WILSON

It seems to me that it is best this afternoon that I do not simply read to you the formal report of the Committee for Improvement of Child Health, since that has already been submitted to the Executive Board of the American Academy of Pediatrics, accepted by it, and will soon be published. I would rather spend this time to develop further the ideas that are stated there. I believe that whatever I say will represent the general consensus of the members of the Committee, but the formal expression of their views I leave, as I have said, to the printed report, and only I am responsible for the details of this afternoon's report. As information resulting from the Academy's Study of Child Health Services became available, and as we grew in our understanding of the problems involved, it became more and more apparent that this work of the Academy concerned with the health of our nation's children could not stop with the end of the survey without great loss, particularly to the Academy itself. It was clear that the Academy was being projected into a position of great influence and authority because of the completeness and uniqueness of the information which it had gathered, but that this position of authority, with the influence it might give us towards directing future activities regarding child health in this country, could soon be lost. Information such as we have obtained becomes quickly obsolete. Changes are going on constantly in our dynamic nation, and in a very short time any opinion which we might have based on this survey could be considered out-dated. It was apparent also that the demand for assistance by various organizations having common purposes with our own, the demand for technical and professional advice, would be greatly increased by the gradual dissemination of knowledge that would result from the survey and that we would be constantly approached for advice and for assistance, especially in the field of medical education with which the survey dealt most importantly. This idea was transmitted to the Executive Board. The result was ultimately the formation of the Committee for Improvement of Child Health.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1971 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 785-785

At its meeting on October 15, 1970 the Executive Board approved the following statement on marijuana, which was prepared by the Massachusetts Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and is published on the recommendation of the Academy's Council on Child Health and Committee on Youth: (1) Young people view the inclusion of marijuana as a narcotic, with all its attendant severe punitive connotations, as another example of hypocrisy and lack of justice in America today. (2) As marijuana is not considered a narcotic but rather a hallucinogen and does not produce addiction as such, it is inappropriate to continue to have this drug subject to the narcotic laws, i.e., the Harrison Narcotic Act. (3) The penalties for possession and being in the presence of marijuana are severe in terms of their immediate and long-term effect on the individual. This opinion is based on the nature of the drug and the cultural circumstances associated with its use. Possession and being present should be changed from a felony to a misdemeanor. (4) However, marijuana, as a potentially harmful drug, should not be legalized in any amount at this time. Legalization, if ever, should be deferred until a maximum degree of research and study on the matter can be accomplished.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 128-128
Author(s):  
Hugh C. Thompson

In the April 1977 issue of Pediatrics (59:636, 1977), Dr. Cunningham recommends that the patient's medical record be given to the family to keep. He urges that the Committee on Standards of Child Health Care consider this subject. For at least 20 years the American Academy of Pediatrics has published for this very purpose, a "Child Health Record." This is publication HE-4 of the Academy and was last revised in 1968. The central office of the Academy tells me that, at the present time, between 50,000 and 100,000 of these are sold annually to physicians for the distribution that Dr. Cunningham recommends.


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