Excerpt from Six Lectures Upon School Hygiene: Delivered Under the Auspices of the Massachusetts Emergency and Hygiene Association to Teachers in the Public Schools
To more thoroughly understand the relations which the Emergency and Hygiene Association bears to school sanitation, it will be necessary, in the first place, to briefly refer to the origin of this Society and to the scope of its work. In 1883 the Woman's Education Association, to which body this community is indebted for several very important reforms, recognizing the necessity for diffusing useful and practical knowledge among the masses, to be used in cases of accident or sudden sickness, undertook to provide such instruction, by volunteer lectures to both men and women, as would accomplish this result. Seven courses of lectures to free classes and three to paying classes were given during the first year with such success, that the Association was encouraged to increase the number of courses in the following year to twenty-five. Of this number, eight were given to the police force, and two to the members of the fire department. These lectures simply gave instruction as to what should be done in cases of emergency, before the arrival of the physician or surgeon, with only enough theory added to render the practice intelligible. While the work of the winter was progressing, the advisory board, which had been formed of gentlemen representing various callings, was gradually enlarged; and when it became evident that the field of labor had outgrown the limits imposed by the rules of the Woman's Association, it was deemed fitting that the responsibilities should be assumed by a new organization.
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