American Decades
"The Fight Against Venereal Disease"
Magazine article
By: Raymond B. Fosdick
Date: November 30, 1918
Source: Fosdick, Raymond B. "The Fight Against Venereal Disease." The New Republic, November 30, 1918, 132–133,134.
About the Author: Raymond Blaine Fosdick (1883–1972), a lawyer and social activist, served as chairman of the Commission on Training Camp Activities of the Army and Navy Departments during World War I. In this capacity, Fosdick fought to maintain high moral standards among the military recruits.
Introduction
Of all the various public health concerns, the subject of venereal disease, particularly syphilis, was the most difficult to bring up in public. For unlike other contagious diseases that were more or less randomly transmitted, syphilis carried the stigma of sin, for the disease was contracted by personal behavior and reflected poorly on the victim.
Nonetheless, by...
[The entire page is 1723 words long]
1910's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- "Nursing as a Profession for College Women"
- "How Physical Training Affects the Welfare of the Nation"
- Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants
- "Tobacco: A Race Poison"
- Painless Childbirth
- "The Endowment of Motherhood"
- "How the Drug Dopers Fight"
- "The Heart of the People"
- "Progress in Pediatrics"
- "Orthopedic Surgery in War Time"
- "War and Mental Diseases"
- "Some Considerations Affecting the Replacement of Men by Women Workers"
- Influenza Epidemic
- "The Fight Against Venereal Disease"
- "The Next War"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
