Home
Search transcripts:    Advanced Search
Notable New     Yorkers
Select     Notable New Yorker

Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
Photo Gallery
Transcript

Part:         Session:         Page of 654

of their general duty in the society where they worked.

I'm sure that Hopkins was attached to that because a part of the Reconstruction Commission's report deals with the prevention of tuberculosis and the necessity for reviewing the whole hospital, camp and medical care program for tuberculosis. I remember clearly that the report deals with the necessity for making preventive provisions for the families of tuberculosis patients on the theory that if the father had tuberculosis and had been at home a long time while it was developing, undoubtedly the wife and children had been exposed to it. Possibly the children were already predisposed. At any rate, they should be supervised and children who showed a decline in weight, or any other symptom, should be put under preventive care at once. A number of schools, or preventoriums, were in the program. It was just about that time that the preventoriums began to be built. They were boarding schools for children who haven't got tuberculosis, but are disposed to it and have a bad family history. That was one of Hopkins's favorite ideas.

I assume that all this was his connection with Smith on politics. I don't think he had much of any other, except that whenever Smith was running for reelection Hopkins would





© 2006 Columbia University Libraries | Oral History Research Office | Rights and Permissions | Help