American Decades
Hill-Burton Act
Law
By: U.S. Congress
Date: August 13, 1946
Source: Hill-Burton Act, August 13, 1946. Available at the Schiller Institute online at http://www.schillerinstitute.org/health/hill_burton.html; website home page at http://www.schilerinstitute.org (accessed March 18, 2003).
Introduction
In 1800, the United States had two hospitals: New York Hospital in New York City and Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia. Before the days of antiseptic, or anti-infection, procedures, contagion in hospitals could pose a danger greater than disease or injury. Patients were looked after at home by families and physicians who spent a good deal of their time making house calls. By the beginning of the twentieth century, however, more people began to turn to hospital care for a number...
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1940's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- "The Lessons of the Selective Service"
- "The Job Ahead"
- "The Diagnostic Value of Vaginal Smears in Carcinoma of the Uterus"
- Penicillin
- "Cut Excess Weight, Women Are Urged"
- "America Is Learning What to Eat"
- "Demerol, Newly Marketed as a Synthetic Substitute For Morphine, Ranks With Sulfa Drugs and Penicillin"
- "Tell 37-Year Rise in Better Eating"
- Hill-Burton Act
- The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care
- "Text of Truman Plea for Public Health Program"
- "Drug Aiding Fight on Tuberculosis"
- State Mental Hospitals
- Sexual Behavior in the Human Male
- "27,658 Polio Cases Listed Last Year"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
