American Decades
The Nation'S Health
The Science and Status of Medicine.
By the late 1930s medicine was well established as a science. The modern age of chemotherapy had arrived with the sulfa drugs, and the age of antibiotics was to come in the next decade. Hormones, insulin, and vitamins were used in daily life. Blood transfusion was one of the most common hospital procedures, together with a bewildering variety of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, including X-ray procedures, electrocardiographs, and basal metabolism techniques. In the first thirty years of the century public health measures had alleviated much human misery. Diseases such as typhoid fever, dysentery, and diphtheria were rapidly disappearing. Other diseases, previously unknown, were taking their place: allergies, diabetes, arthritis, and diseases of the peripheral blood vessels. There were still epidemics and some diseases, which, as one doctor put it, "many a research man would literally give...
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1930's Medicine and Health
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Birth Control
- The Blues Blue Cross And Blue Shield
- The Cost Of Being Sick
- The Dawn Of The Sulfa Drugs
- The Food, Drug, And Cosmetic Act Of 1938
- The "Good Sleep"—A Ne W Era In Surgery
- "The Great White Plague"—Tuberculosis Before The Age Of Antibiotics
- Health And The New Deal
- The March Of Dimes And The National Foundation For Infantile Paralysis
- Maternal Mortality—Why Mothers Died
- The Nation'S Health
- The New Deal, Health Insurance, And The Ama
- Psychoanalysis In America And The Impact Of The European Intellectual Migration
- Sex, Disease, And The New Deal
- Specialization Versus General Practice
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1930–1939
