132 SCIENCE REMAKING THE WORLD 



or a preventive as effective as vaccination for smallpox. 

 Failing these, there is great need for increased education 

 of the public, more health education for school children, 

 better training for physicians and nurses from the 

 scientific and social aspect. Most persons need not 

 have tuberculosis unless they choose to do so by de- 

 clining to do the things necessary for its prevention. 



GUIDE TO FURTHER READING 



"Pulmonary Tuberculosis," by Otis. (Leonard.) 1920. 



"Early Pulmonary Tuberculosis," by Hawes. (Wood.) 1913. 



" Rules for Recovery from Pulmonary Tuberculosis," by Brown. 

 (Lea and Febinger, 4th edition, revised and enlarged.) 1923. 



"Rest and Other Things," by Krause. (Williams & Wilkins.) 

 1923. 



"Environment and Resistance in Tuberculosis," by Krause. 

 (Williams & Wilkins.) 1923. 



"The Causes of Tuberculosis," by Cobbett. (Cambridge Univer- 

 sity Press.) 1917. 



Bulstrode lecture, Lancet, 1903, vol. 2, page 1199. 



"Congenital Tuberculosis," by Warthin and Couie. Journal of 

 Infectious Diseases, vol. 1, page 140. 



"Relation of Human and Bovine Tuberculosis." Report of 

 ?"itish Royal Commission, 1905. 



"What You Should Know About Tuberculosis." Pamphlet 106, 

 .National Tuberculosis Association. 



" Sitting and Sleeping in the Open Air." Pamphlet 101, National 

 Tuberculosis Association. 



