Health Care for Dependents of Servicemen: Hearings Before the United States Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, Subcommittee on Health, Eighty-Second Congress, Second Session, on Mar. 10-14, Apr. 10, 1952U.S. Government Printing Office, 1952 - 286 pages Considers legislation to establish aid to states for maternity and infant care for military dependents. |
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Page 2
... families whose welfare is , I know , the common concern of all of us . It is my hope that we can work out legislation that will meet the need , and which will have general approval . In scheduling these bills for hearing at this time ...
... families whose welfare is , I know , the common concern of all of us . It is my hope that we can work out legislation that will meet the need , and which will have general approval . In scheduling these bills for hearing at this time ...
Page 15
... families directly , told us how valuable the emergency maternity and infant - care program was in that period , how well it met the needs of individual mothers often in the most critical period of their family life . Even now , as I and ...
... families directly , told us how valuable the emergency maternity and infant - care program was in that period , how well it met the needs of individual mothers often in the most critical period of their family life . Even now , as I and ...
Page 16
... families stay in the communities where they have been living , with the man coming home to visit them as often as he can while he stays in this country . Many families who move to the camp area when the enlisted man is there move ...
... families stay in the communities where they have been living , with the man coming home to visit them as often as he can while he stays in this country . Many families who move to the camp area when the enlisted man is there move ...
Page 18
... families as much as possible . If the family moves near the enlisted man's post , there is the extra expense of ... families become apparent . Being young , few of them have substantial sav- ings to fall back upon . How , then , are ...
... families as much as possible . If the family moves near the enlisted man's post , there is the extra expense of ... families become apparent . Being young , few of them have substantial sav- ings to fall back upon . How , then , are ...
Page 19
... families of service- men over a year's period . Under its financial assistance policy for meeting emergency needs , only about 10,000 of these families will be helped in paying for care , and as already pointed out , this would be only ...
... families of service- men over a year's period . Under its financial assistance policy for meeting emergency needs , only about 10,000 of these families will be helped in paying for care , and as already pointed out , this would be only ...
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Common terms and phrases
adequate administration allotment American Hospital Association American Legion American Medical Association American Red Cross Angeles County Armed Forces armed services assistance baby basis benefits bill Blue Cross Blue Shield Chairman Children's Bureau clinics committee cost coverage CRAWFORD CROSBY D'Alessio delivery dependents of servicemen doctor emergency maternity EMIC program enlisted members expenses families Federal Security Federal Security Agency health agency health departments husbands included income infant care program infants of enlisted legislation Los Angeles County maternal and child maternity and infant maternity and infant-care ment military hospitals month mother obstetrical obstetricians operation organizations osteopathic paid patients pay grade payment pediatric personnel pital prenatal prenatal care present private hospital problem received Red Cross Senator HILL Senator LEHMAN servicemen's wives statement STEENWYK SwOPE tion welfare wife wives and infants wives of servicemen women utilizing World World War II