scholarly journals Medical Care Plans for Industrial Workers and Their Relationship to Public Health Programs

1948 ◽  
Vol 38 (9) ◽  
pp. 1245-1253
Author(s):  
Lee Janis ◽  
Milton I. Roemer
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
pp. 744-746

For a three weeks' period during the month of June 1948, the University of Illinois, through its Division of Services for Crippled Children, and the U. S. Children's Bureau conducted an institute for professors of medical social work in the approved schools of medical social work. The objectives of this institute were several: one was to give to the teaching group in one of the important professional fields ancillary to medicine an opportunity to review the contributions of its field to the public medical care programs, particularly those in maternal and child health and services for crippled children; another was to aid in the critical recruiting activity which needs to be carried on in order to staff the public health programs adequately with this type of personnel; a third was to stimulate thinking regarding the make-up of the curriculum for medical social students in order to include in the teaching program an adequate orientation and training in the activities of the public health programs. The institute consisted of a group of leaders in the various aspects of maternal and child health and crippled children's programs conducting discussions concerning their individual aspects of the program. A state health officer, Dr. W. L. Treuting of Louisiana, reviewed the total health program. Dr. Herbert R. Kobes, Director of Services for Crippled Children in Illinois, and Dr. Edwin F. Daily of the U. S. Children's Bureau discussed the medical care, particularly the crippled children's, programs as they are found throughout the nation.


2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hilde Iversen ◽  
Torbjørn Rundmo ◽  
Hroar Klempe

Abstract. The core aim of the present study is to compare the effects of a safety campaign and a behavior modification program on traffic safety. As is the case in community-based health promotion, the present study's approach of the attitude campaign was based on active participation of the group of recipients. One of the reasons why many attitude campaigns conducted previously have failed may be that they have been society-based public health programs. Both the interventions were carried out simultaneously among students aged 18-19 years in two Norwegian high schools (n = 342). At the first high school the intervention was behavior modification, at the second school a community-based attitude campaign was carried out. Baseline and posttest data on attitudes toward traffic safety and self-reported risk behavior were collected. The results showed that there was a significant total effect of the interventions although the effect depended on the type of intervention. There were significant differences in attitude and behavior only in the sample where the attitude campaign was carried out and no significant changes were found in the group of recipients of behavior modification.


Vaccines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 281
Author(s):  
Andrea Haekyung Haselbeck ◽  
Birkneh Tilahun Tadesse ◽  
Juyeon Park ◽  
Malick M. Gibani ◽  
Ligia María Cruz Espinoza ◽  
...  

Typhoid fever remains a significant health problem in sub-Saharan Africa, with incidence rates of >100 cases per 100,000 person-years of observation. Despite the prequalification of safe and effective typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCV), some uncertainties remain around future demand. Real-life effectiveness data, which inform public health programs on the impact of TCVs in reducing typhoid-related mortality and morbidity, from an African setting may help encourage the introduction of TCVs in high-burden settings. Here, we describe a cluster-randomized trial to investigate population-level protection of TYPBAR-TCV®, a Vi-polysaccharide conjugated to a tetanus-toxoid protein carrier (Vi-TT) against blood-culture-confirmed typhoid fever, and the synthesis of health economic evidence to inform policy decisions. A total of 80 geographically distinct clusters are delineated within the Agogo district of the Asante Akim region in Ghana. Clusters are randomized to the intervention arm receiving Vi-TT or a control arm receiving the meningococcal A conjugate vaccine. The primary study endpoint is the total protection of Vi-TT against blood-culture-confirmed typhoid fever. Total, direct, and indirect protection are measured as secondary outcomes. Blood-culture-based enhanced surveillance enables the estimation of incidence rates in the intervention and control clusters. Evaluation of the real-world impact of TCVs and evidence synthesis improve the uptake of prequalified/licensed safe and effective typhoid vaccines in public health programs of high burden settings. This trial is registered at the Pan African Clinical Trial Registry, accessible at Pan African Clinical Trials Registry (ID: PACTR202011804563392).


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