PAPERS ON MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH 419 



a trade. Nearby will be an adequately equipped gym- 

 nasium and parade grounds so that we can build up the 

 muscles, and incidentally the heart muscle, before send- 

 ing our patients out to work. In this way we can tell 

 by proper supervision how much our patients can stand 

 and advise future employers and doctors just what the 

 patient can do. - We shall, perhaps, have a separate hos- 

 pital and surely a school for the children so that we can 

 start them out upon a proper vocation for cardiacs. Scat- 

 tered throughout the city will be a sufficient number of 

 cardiac clinics from which we shall receive and to which 

 we shall refer our patients. These clinics will be ade- 

 quately manned with doctors, nurses and social workers, 

 and our Association for the Relief and Prevention of 

 Heart Disease will be the centre and unifying group of 

 all these activities, of all the numerous outside agencies 

 which are or will be formed and to the great public which 

 will then be educated. 



