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Marine Hospital Service

The Marine Hospital Service was an organization of Marine Hospitals dedicated to the care of ill and disabled seamen in the United States Merchant Marine, the U.S. Coast Guard and other federal beneficiaries. The Marine Hospital Service evolved into the U.S. Public Health Service.

Flag of the Marine Hospital Service

It was the point of origin for several components of the current Public Health Service, including the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, the National Institutes of Health, and multiple programs now incorporated into the Health Resources and Services Administration.

History edit

Background: Marine Hospital Fund edit

 
Marine Hospital in Charleston, South Carolina, built in 1833

The origins of the system of Marine Hospitals can be traced to the passage, by the 5th Congress of the United States, of "An Act for the Relief of Sick and Disabled Seamen" in 1798. This act created Marine Hospitals to care for sick seamen.[1][2] The Marine Hospital Fund was placed under the Revenue Marine Service (a forerunner of the present-day Coast Guard) within the Department of the Treasury.[3]

It was the first federal health law.[2] It authorized a tax, which was the deduction of twenty cents per month from the wages of the seamen.[4] This tax raised funds for physicians and to support the network of hospitals.[5] Funding for the hospitals was provided by a mandatory tax of about 1% of the wages of all maritime sailors.[1][6] (In 1884, the tax was abolished and in 1906 funds were dispensed by Congress.)

The act led to the gradual creation of a network of hospitals along coastal and inland waterways.[7] They were initially located along the East Coast, at the harbors of the major port cities, with Boston being the site of the first such facility, followed later by others including in the Baltimore vicinity at Curtis Bay.[1][2] As the boundaries of the United States expanded, and harbors were built on other coasts, so too were marine hospitals. In the 1830s and 1840s they were built along inland waterways, the Great Lakes, and the Gulf of Mexico. After the acquisition of the Oregon Territory (1846) and California (1848) hospitals were built in 1850s at Pacific Coast harbors.[1]

Following the Civil War, public outcry and scandal surrounded the Marine Hospital Fund. In 1869, Dr. John Shaw Billings, a prominent Army surgeon, was appointed to head an investigation of the Marine Hospital Fund. Dr. Billings found the hospital fund to be inadequate and completely disorganized.

Establishment edit

In June 1870 the 41st Congress formally converted the loose network of locally controlled marine hospitals, the Marine Hospital Fund, into a centrally controlled Marine Hospital Service, with its headquarters in Washington, D.C. This reorganization made the Marine Hospital Service into its own bureau within the Department of the Treasury.[3]

Dr. John Maynard Woodworth was subsequently appointed to the Service as "Supervising Surgeon." He transformed the service into a disciplined organization based on his experience in the Union Army as a surgeon. Dr. Woodworth required his physicians to be a mobile work force stationed where the service was in need, and he mandated the daily wear uniforms. This eventually led to the creation of the modern-day Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. Dr. Woodworth, using Army-style heraldry, created the Marine Hospital Service fouled anchor and caduceus seal which is used to this day by the Public Health Service. In 1873, Dr. Woodworth's title was changed to "Supervising Surgeon General," a forerunner of the modern-day office of Surgeon General of the United States.[8]

Woodworth created a cadre of mobile, career service physicians, who could be assigned as needed to the various Marine Hospitals. The commissioned officer corps was established by legislation in 1889, and signed by President Grover Cleveland. At first open only to physicians, over the course of the 20th century, the Corps expanded to include veterinarians, dentists, physician assistants, sanitary engineers, pharmacists, nurses, environmental health officers, scientists, and other types of health professionals. It is now known as the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service.

Increasing scope edit

The scope of activities of the Marine Hospital Service began to expand well beyond the care of merchant seamen in the closing decades of the nineteenth century, beginning with the control of infectious disease. Starting in the mid-14th century, ships entering harbors were quarantined when any of the crew was sick. This practice was normal procedure at United States harbors, with quarantine originally a function of the individual states, rather than of the Federal Government. The National Quarantine Act of 1878 vested quarantine authority to the Marine Hospital Service. However, the Public Health Act of 1879 created the National Board of Health, through which quarantine authority was shared with the U.S. Army and Navy; this arrangement was not reauthorized by Congress in 1883, and its powers reverted solely to the Marine Hospital Service.[9] Over the next half a century, the Marine Hospital Service increasingly took over quarantine functions from individual state authorities.

 
The Marine Hospital, Staten Island, N.Y. In 1887, the National Institute of Health began as a single room Laboratory of Hygiene for bacteriological investigation established by the U.S. Marine Hospital Service at Stapleton, Staten Island, New York. From 1887 to 1891, the hygienic laboratory was located in the attic of the Marine Hospital on Staten Island.

The Marine Hospitals, as their name suggests, were hospitals constructed at key sea and river ports across the nation to provide health care for merchant marine sailors. Aside from the well-being of these sailors, the hospitals provided a key monitoring and gate-keeping function against pathogenic diseases.[3] As immigration increased dramatically in the late 19th century, the Federal Government also took over the processing of immigrants from the individual states, beginning in 1891. The Marine Hospital Service was assigned the responsibility for the medical inspection of arriving immigrants at sites such as Ellis Island in New York Harbor. Commissioned officers played a major role in fulfilling the Service's commitment to prevent disease from entering the country.

As the nation grew, the scope of Marine Hospital Service's duties grew to include domestic and foreign quarantine and other national public health functions. Over time, the hospitals of the service were also expanded to include research and prevention work as well as the care of patients. Aside from merchant seamen, members of the military, immigrants, Native Americans, other federal beneficiaries, and people affected by chronic and epidemic diseases found a source for health care in the MHS and its hospitals.[citation needed]

In 1899, the Marine Hospital Service first formed internal divisions: the Division of Marine Hospitals and Relief, Division of Domestic (Interstate) Quarantine, Division of Insular and Foreign Quarantine and Immigration, Division of Personnel and Accounts, Division of Sanitary Reports and Statistics, Division of Scientific Research and Sanitation, and Miscellaneous Division, although there were minor name changes after this time.[10]

Transformation into Public Health Service edit

 
U.S. Marine Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky (c.1909)

In 1902, the Marine Hospital Service was renamed the "Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service." In 1912, as the emphasis of its responsibilities shifted from sailors to general public health, the name was changed again to the "Public Health Service" to encompass its diverse and changing mission.

 
Flag of the U.S. Public Health and Marine Hospital Service

The Division of Hospitals, which contained the Marine Hospital system, became part of the Bureau of Medical Services in 1943, and was eventually renamed as a different Bureau of Medical Services within the Health Services Administration in 1973.[10][11] Large new buildings were constructed for many Marine Hospitals in the 1920s and 1930s, and the system reached its peak of 30 hospitals in 1943.[12] A wave of closings in 1944–1953 mainly targeted hospitals that had not been upgraded, and another wave during 1965–1970 closed the remaining hospitals at inland locations, leaving eight general hospitals and the National Leprosarium operating.[13] The system was abolished in 1981, with the last eight general hospitals transferred to other organizations,[14][15] and the remaining functions of the Bureau of Medical Services merged into the present Bureau of Primary Health Care within the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).[16][17] PHS would however continue to operate the National Leprosarium until 1999.[18]

Other pre-1912 divisions of the Marine Hospital Service have descendants that operate to the present day:

Today, the records for these institutions sit in storage at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland and the National Archives in College Park, Maryland.[citation needed]

Hospitals edit

The hospitals themselves were, by the middle of the 19th century, fairly imposing and architecturally grand structures in many cases. As long as ample federal funding was available for their construction, these hospitals were impressive examples of government-provided health care. The hospitals of the early 20th century in major port cities such as New Orleans, San Francisco, and Savannah displayed ornate architectural detail and reflected many of the changes sweeping medicine at the time.[citation needed]

In addition to the major hospitals, many lower-class hospitals and clinics existed.[10][24]

A chronological gallery of hospitals constructed prior to 1912 follow, showing the year operations began as a U.S. Marine Hospitals. Not all hospitals are shown. Structures that are still extant are marked with an asterisk (*).

 
Lazaretto (pesthouse) for the Columbia River Quarantine Station, Knappton Cove, Washington, built 1912

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Gostin, Lawrence O. (2008). "Box 8: The Federal Presence in Public Health". Public Health Law: Power, Duty, Restraint, Revised and Expanded (2nd ed.). University of California Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0520253766. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c "Public Health". marinehospital.org. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c "Images From the History of the Public Health Service: Introduction". nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved December 3, 2017.
  4. ^ "Justice Network - Sick and Disabled Seaman Act of 1798 Govt. Healthcare". nosue.org. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
  5. ^ "Public Health in the United States". sphweb.bumc.bu.edu. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
  6. ^ Ungar, Rick (January 17, 2011). "Congress Passes Socialized Medicine and Mandates Health Insurance -In 1798". Forbes.com. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  7. ^ "About the Commissioned Corps". usphs.gov. from the original on July 28, 2007. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
  8. ^ ASPA. . surgeongeneral.gov. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved December 3, 2017.
  9. ^ Smillie, W. G. "The National Board of Health, 1879-1883" American Journal of Public Health and The Nation's Health (1943) 33(8):925-930.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Records of the Public Health Service [PHS], 1912-1968". National Archives. August 15, 2016. Sections 90.3, 90.7, 90.8. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
  11. ^ "Reorganization and functions of the Public Health Service". United States Senate. 1943. pp. 4–6. Retrieved September 15, 2020 – via Internet Archive. Alt URL
  12. ^ Public Health Service Hospital Closings. U.S. House of Representatives. 1965. p. 3.
  13. ^ "United States. Public Health Service. Division of Hospitals". SNAC. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  14. ^ Driscoll, Robert S. (February 1, 1986). "What Happened to the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital?". Military Medicine. 151 (2): 128–129. doi:10.1093/milmed/151.2.128. ISSN 0026-4075. PMID 3083292.
  15. ^ "United States. Public Health Service. Division of Hospitals". SNAC. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  16. ^ 47 FR 38409
  17. ^ Erickson, Anna. "A Policy History of the Community Health Centers Program: 1965-2012" (PDF). University of Michigan. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
  18. ^ "History of the National Hansen's Disease (Leprosy) Program". HHS-Health Resources and Services Administration. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  19. ^ "Records of the Health Resources and Services Administration [HRSA]". National Archives. August 15, 2016. Section 512.2. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
  20. ^ "Records of the Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]". National Archives. August 15, 2016. Section 412.2. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
  21. ^ Doyle, Henry N. (1977). "The federal industrial hygiene agency: a history of the Division of Occupational Health, United States Public Health Service" (PDF). American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists. Retrieved September 3, 2020.
  22. ^ "Images From the History of the Public Health Service: Disease Control and Prevention, Fighting the Spread of Epidemic Diseases". U.S. National Library of Medicine. January 16, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2020.
  23. ^ "History of Quarantine". U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. July 20, 2020. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  24. ^ Annual Report of the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service of the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1921. p. 301.

External links edit

  • The National Library of Medicine has a to the documents culled from various PHS hospitals when these closed.
  • marinehospital.org- Website of the U.S. Hospital Foundation, which is restoring the Marine Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky.
  • History Of National Institution Of Health

marine, hospital, service, organization, marine, hospitals, dedicated, care, disabled, seamen, united, states, merchant, marine, coast, guard, other, federal, beneficiaries, evolved, into, public, health, service, flag, point, origin, several, components, curr. The Marine Hospital Service was an organization of Marine Hospitals dedicated to the care of ill and disabled seamen in the United States Merchant Marine the U S Coast Guard and other federal beneficiaries The Marine Hospital Service evolved into the U S Public Health Service Flag of the Marine Hospital ServiceIt was the point of origin for several components of the current Public Health Service including the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps the National Institutes of Health and multiple programs now incorporated into the Health Resources and Services Administration Contents 1 History 1 1 Background Marine Hospital Fund 1 2 Establishment 1 3 Increasing scope 1 4 Transformation into Public Health Service 2 Hospitals 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editBackground Marine Hospital Fund edit nbsp Marine Hospital in Charleston South Carolina built in 1833The origins of the system of Marine Hospitals can be traced to the passage by the 5th Congress of the United States of An Act for the Relief of Sick and Disabled Seamen in 1798 This act created Marine Hospitals to care for sick seamen 1 2 The Marine Hospital Fund was placed under the Revenue Marine Service a forerunner of the present day Coast Guard within the Department of the Treasury 3 It was the first federal health law 2 It authorized a tax which was the deduction of twenty cents per month from the wages of the seamen 4 This tax raised funds for physicians and to support the network of hospitals 5 Funding for the hospitals was provided by a mandatory tax of about 1 of the wages of all maritime sailors 1 6 In 1884 the tax was abolished and in 1906 funds were dispensed by Congress The act led to the gradual creation of a network of hospitals along coastal and inland waterways 7 They were initially located along the East Coast at the harbors of the major port cities with Boston being the site of the first such facility followed later by others including in the Baltimore vicinity at Curtis Bay 1 2 As the boundaries of the United States expanded and harbors were built on other coasts so too were marine hospitals In the 1830s and 1840s they were built along inland waterways the Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico After the acquisition of the Oregon Territory 1846 and California 1848 hospitals were built in 1850s at Pacific Coast harbors 1 Following the Civil War public outcry and scandal surrounded the Marine Hospital Fund In 1869 Dr John Shaw Billings a prominent Army surgeon was appointed to head an investigation of the Marine Hospital Fund Dr Billings found the hospital fund to be inadequate and completely disorganized Establishment edit In June 1870 the 41st Congress formally converted the loose network of locally controlled marine hospitals the Marine Hospital Fund into a centrally controlled Marine Hospital Service with its headquarters in Washington D C This reorganization made the Marine Hospital Service into its own bureau within the Department of the Treasury 3 Dr John Maynard Woodworth was subsequently appointed to the Service as Supervising Surgeon He transformed the service into a disciplined organization based on his experience in the Union Army as a surgeon Dr Woodworth required his physicians to be a mobile work force stationed where the service was in need and he mandated the daily wear uniforms This eventually led to the creation of the modern day Public Health Service Commissioned Corps Dr Woodworth using Army style heraldry created the Marine Hospital Service fouled anchor and caduceus seal which is used to this day by the Public Health Service In 1873 Dr Woodworth s title was changed to Supervising Surgeon General a forerunner of the modern day office of Surgeon General of the United States 8 Woodworth created a cadre of mobile career service physicians who could be assigned as needed to the various Marine Hospitals The commissioned officer corps was established by legislation in 1889 and signed by President Grover Cleveland At first open only to physicians over the course of the 20th century the Corps expanded to include veterinarians dentists physician assistants sanitary engineers pharmacists nurses environmental health officers scientists and other types of health professionals It is now known as the Commissioned Corps of the U S Public Health Service Increasing scope edit The scope of activities of the Marine Hospital Service began to expand well beyond the care of merchant seamen in the closing decades of the nineteenth century beginning with the control of infectious disease Starting in the mid 14th century ships entering harbors were quarantined when any of the crew was sick This practice was normal procedure at United States harbors with quarantine originally a function of the individual states rather than of the Federal Government The National Quarantine Act of 1878 vested quarantine authority to the Marine Hospital Service However the Public Health Act of 1879 created the National Board of Health through which quarantine authority was shared with the U S Army and Navy this arrangement was not reauthorized by Congress in 1883 and its powers reverted solely to the Marine Hospital Service 9 Over the next half a century the Marine Hospital Service increasingly took over quarantine functions from individual state authorities nbsp The Marine Hospital Staten Island N Y In 1887 the National Institute of Health began as a single room Laboratory of Hygiene for bacteriological investigation established by the U S Marine Hospital Service at Stapleton Staten Island New York From 1887 to 1891 the hygienic laboratory was located in the attic of the Marine Hospital on Staten Island The Marine Hospitals as their name suggests were hospitals constructed at key sea and river ports across the nation to provide health care for merchant marine sailors Aside from the well being of these sailors the hospitals provided a key monitoring and gate keeping function against pathogenic diseases 3 As immigration increased dramatically in the late 19th century the Federal Government also took over the processing of immigrants from the individual states beginning in 1891 The Marine Hospital Service was assigned the responsibility for the medical inspection of arriving immigrants at sites such as Ellis Island in New York Harbor Commissioned officers played a major role in fulfilling the Service s commitment to prevent disease from entering the country As the nation grew the scope of Marine Hospital Service s duties grew to include domestic and foreign quarantine and other national public health functions Over time the hospitals of the service were also expanded to include research and prevention work as well as the care of patients Aside from merchant seamen members of the military immigrants Native Americans other federal beneficiaries and people affected by chronic and epidemic diseases found a source for health care in the MHS and its hospitals citation needed In 1899 the Marine Hospital Service first formed internal divisions the Division of Marine Hospitals and Relief Division of Domestic Interstate Quarantine Division of Insular and Foreign Quarantine and Immigration Division of Personnel and Accounts Division of Sanitary Reports and Statistics Division of Scientific Research and Sanitation and Miscellaneous Division although there were minor name changes after this time 10 Transformation into Public Health Service edit Main article United States Public Health Service nbsp U S Marine Hospital in Louisville Kentucky c 1909 In 1902 the Marine Hospital Service was renamed the Public Health and Marine Hospital Service In 1912 as the emphasis of its responsibilities shifted from sailors to general public health the name was changed again to the Public Health Service to encompass its diverse and changing mission nbsp Flag of the U S Public Health and Marine Hospital ServiceThe Division of Hospitals which contained the Marine Hospital system became part of the Bureau of Medical Services in 1943 and was eventually renamed as a different Bureau of Medical Services within the Health Services Administration in 1973 10 11 Large new buildings were constructed for many Marine Hospitals in the 1920s and 1930s and the system reached its peak of 30 hospitals in 1943 12 A wave of closings in 1944 1953 mainly targeted hospitals that had not been upgraded and another wave during 1965 1970 closed the remaining hospitals at inland locations leaving eight general hospitals and the National Leprosarium operating 13 The system was abolished in 1981 with the last eight general hospitals transferred to other organizations 14 15 and the remaining functions of the Bureau of Medical Services merged into the present Bureau of Primary Health Care within the Health Resources and Services Administration HRSA 16 17 PHS would however continue to operate the National Leprosarium until 1999 18 Other pre 1912 divisions of the Marine Hospital Service have descendants that operate to the present day The Division of Domestic Quarantine became the Division of States Relations and then the Bureau of State Services in 1943 10 This bureau would eventually give rise to the modern Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC as well as the HRSA Bureau of Health Workforce and Healthcare Systems Bureau 10 19 The Division of Scientific Research became the National Institutes of Health The Environmental Health Divisions predecessor of the Environmental Protection Agency and FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health and the Division of Industrial Hygiene predecessor of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health were spun off from it in the mid 20th century 10 20 21 The Division of Foreign Quarantine eventually became the CDC Division of Global Migration and Quarantine 22 23 The Division of Sanitary Reports and Statistics was an ancestor of the CDC National Center for Health Statistics 10 Today the records for these institutions sit in storage at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda Maryland and the National Archives in College Park Maryland citation needed Hospitals editFurther information List of U S Marine Hospitals The hospitals themselves were by the middle of the 19th century fairly imposing and architecturally grand structures in many cases As long as ample federal funding was available for their construction these hospitals were impressive examples of government provided health care The hospitals of the early 20th century in major port cities such as New Orleans San Francisco and Savannah displayed ornate architectural detail and reflected many of the changes sweeping medicine at the time citation needed In addition to the major hospitals many lower class hospitals and clinics existed 10 24 A chronological gallery of hospitals constructed prior to 1912 follow showing the year operations began as a U S Marine Hospitals Not all hospitals are shown Structures that are still extant are marked with an asterisk nbsp Temporary Boston hospital at Castle Island 1800 nbsp Norfolk Virginia hospital 1800 nbsp Second Boston hospital at Charlestown Navy Yard 1804 nbsp Fourth Boston hospital in Chelsea Massachusetts 1827 nbsp Stapleton Staten Island hospital 1831 nbsp Charleston South Carolina hospital 1833 nbsp Mobile Alabama hospital 1843 nbsp Lahaina Hawaii hospital 1844 nbsp Key West Florida hospital 1845 nbsp First New Orleans hospital at Algiers 1847 nbsp Natchez Mississippi hospital 1852 nbsp Louisville Kentucky hospital 1852 nbsp Cleveland hospital 1852 nbsp First Chicago hospital at Fort Dearborn 1852 nbsp Paducah Kentucky hospital 1852 nbsp First San Francisco hospital at Rincon Point 1854 nbsp Fifth Boston hospital in Chelsea Massachusetts 1857 nbsp Detroit hospital 1857 nbsp St Louis hospital 1858 nbsp Portland Maine hospital 1859 nbsp First Cincinnati hospital 1860 nbsp Second New Orleans hospital never completed abandoned 1860 nbsp Galena Illinois hospital 1861 nbsp Second Chicago hospital 1873 nbsp Second San Francisco hospital at the Presidio 1875 nbsp Vineyard Haven Massachusetts hospital 1879 nbsp Second Cincinnati hospital in the former Kilgour Mansion 1882 nbsp Third New Orleans hospital 1883 nbsp Port Townsend Washington hospital 1883 nbsp Memphis Tennessee hospital 1884 nbsp Cairo Illinois hospital 1886 nbsp Baltimore hospital 1887 nbsp Evansville Indiana hospital 1892 nbsp Tuberculosis sanatorium at Fort Stanton New Mexico 1898 nbsp Second Wilmington North Carolina hospital 1898 nbsp Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital 1902 nbsp Savannah Georgia hospital 1906 nbsp Second Pittsburgh hospital 1909 nbsp Buffalo New York hospital 1909 nbsp Lazaretto pesthouse for the Columbia River Quarantine Station Knappton Cove Washington built 1912See also editTimeline of the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps United States Public Health ServiceReferences edit a b c d Gostin Lawrence O 2008 Box 8 The Federal Presence in Public Health Public Health Law Power Duty Restraint Revised and Expanded 2nd ed University of California Press p 156 ISBN 978 0520253766 Retrieved November 8 2012 a b c Public Health marinehospital org Retrieved March 7 2018 a b c Images From the History of the Public Health Service Introduction nlm nih gov Retrieved December 3 2017 Justice Network Sick and Disabled Seaman Act of 1798 Govt Healthcare nosue org Retrieved March 7 2018 Public Health in the United States sphweb bumc bu edu Retrieved March 7 2018 Ungar Rick January 17 2011 Congress Passes Socialized Medicine and Mandates Health Insurance In 1798 Forbes com Retrieved November 8 2012 About the Commissioned Corps usphs gov Archived from the original on July 28 2007 Retrieved March 7 2018 ASPA John Maynard Woodworth 1871 1879 surgeongeneral gov Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved December 3 2017 Smillie W G The National Board of Health 1879 1883 American Journal of Public Health and The Nation s Health 1943 33 8 925 930 a b c d e f g Records of the Public Health Service PHS 1912 1968 National Archives August 15 2016 Sections 90 3 90 7 90 8 Retrieved August 28 2020 Reorganization and functions of the Public Health Service United States Senate 1943 pp 4 6 Retrieved September 15 2020 via Internet Archive Alt URL Public Health Service Hospital Closings U S House of Representatives 1965 p 3 United States Public Health Service Division of Hospitals SNAC Retrieved August 31 2020 Driscoll Robert S February 1 1986 What Happened to the U S Public Health Service Hospital Military Medicine 151 2 128 129 doi 10 1093 milmed 151 2 128 ISSN 0026 4075 PMID 3083292 United States Public Health Service Division of Hospitals SNAC Retrieved August 31 2020 47 FR 38409 Erickson Anna A Policy History of the Community Health Centers Program 1965 2012 PDF University of Michigan Retrieved August 30 2020 History of the National Hansen s Disease Leprosy Program HHS Health Resources and Services Administration Retrieved July 27 2011 Records of the Health Resources and Services Administration HRSA National Archives August 15 2016 Section 512 2 Retrieved August 29 2020 Records of the Environmental Protection Agency EPA National Archives August 15 2016 Section 412 2 Retrieved August 29 2020 Doyle Henry N 1977 The federal industrial hygiene agency a history of the Division of Occupational Health United States Public Health Service PDF American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists Retrieved September 3 2020 Images From the History of the Public Health Service Disease Control and Prevention Fighting the Spread of Epidemic Diseases U S National Library of Medicine January 16 2012 Retrieved September 16 2020 History of Quarantine U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention July 20 2020 Retrieved September 21 2020 Annual Report of the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service of the United States U S Government Printing Office 1921 p 301 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States Marine Hospitals nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Marine Hospital Service The National Library of Medicine has a guide to the documents culled from various PHS hospitals when these closed marinehospital org Website of the U S Hospital Foundation which is restoring the Marine Hospital in Louisville Kentucky History Of National Institution Of Health Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marine Hospital Service amp oldid 1170242379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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