Library Collections: Document: Full Text


The Care, Cure, And Education Of The Crippled Child

Creator: Henry Edward Abt (author)
Date: 1924
Publisher: International Society for Crippled Children
Source: Available at selected libraries
Figures From This Artifact: Figure 1  Figure 2  Figure 3  Figure 4  Figure 5  Figure 6  Figure 7

Previous Page   Next Page   All Pages 


Page 29:

380  

The Southwestern Coast Area

381  

Combined area: 266,987 square miles.
California population 3,426,861
Nevada population 77,407
Total 3,504,268

382  

The problem in the southwestern coast region is closely analogous to that in the area directly north. Provision to care for the crippled children of San Francisco and Los Angeles is most satisfactory. In San Francisco is located a fifty-bed Shriners' Hospital, and the two hundred seventy-five-bed Children's Hospital. Educational facilities are provided at both these institutions. Drexler Hall, at Redwood City, and the Stanford Convalescent Home, at Palo Alto, provide convalescent care within fifty miles of the city. In Los Angeles, The Orthopaedic Hospital School and its projected convalescent home will be fully adequate to the needs of the center and surrounding counties. At Santa Barbara, the Cottage Hospital is equipped to provide necessary care for children of the extreme southern coast region. The central inland portion of the state is provided with a hospital for joint tuberculosis at Springville and a well equipped general hospital at Fresno. In Nevada, however, an area of 110,690 square miles is without any special provision for the education or care of crippled children. For inland and northern California, special educational facilities are available no nearer than San Francisco, a maximum distance of nearly 400 miles.

383  

The Southwestern "Desert" States

384  

Combined area: 236,590 square miles.
Arizona population 333,903
New Mexico population 360,350
Total 694,253

385  

In a distance of six hundred eighty-five miles between the borders of these neighbor states, one private institution, Dr. Charles Luken's Children's Home and Hospital, is the sole agency to aid crippled children. No special educational facilities whatsoever are provided. The situation speaks for itself.

386  

The Central Rocky Mountain States

Combined area: 188,938 square miles.
Colorado population 939,629
Utah population 449,396
Total 1,389,025

387  

About forty-seven per cent of the population of these two states is urban. Only two centers for the care and education of crippled children are provided: Salt Lake City, where the Children's Home acts as a convalescent hospital, and Denver, provided with the Children's Hospital. In Colorado Springs, Colorado, the Glockner Sanatorium and Hospital does some orthopedic work. Thus we may interpret that under normal conditions fully fifty per cent of the crippled children of the central Rocky Mountain States have no special care available within distances ranging from fifty to four hundred miles. No special education is provided for those indigent children who are unable to attend the public schools.

388  

The Northern Rocky Mountain States

389  

Combined area: 244,911 square miles.
Montana' population 548,889
Wyoming population 194,402
Total 743,291

390  

St. Vincent's Hospital, at Billings, and The Butte Auxiliary, at Butte, Montana, would very nearly suffice to provide care and education for the crippled children of these two states if numerous organizations such as the one at Butte were constantly vigilant to find cases where such facilities were needed. Any inadequacy which may exist is due to the isolation of these communities rather than to the lack of sufficient hospital beds. A normal ratio of crippled children to population would bring the total number of crippled children of this area to less than 300.

391  

The Northwestern Mississippi Valley Region

392  

Combined area: 194,326 square miles.
North Dakota population 645,680
Northern South Dakota population 318,273-1-
Minnesota population 2,387,125
Total 3,351,078

393  

-1- When states are divided into two areas, the population and area of each section is approximated at one-half the total figure.

394  

Until 1924, the Twin Cities, (St. Paul and Minneapolis) were the only ostensible orthopedic centers for this entire region. Of course the majority of crippled children, beyond a radius of one hundred miles from St. Paul, were entirely neglected. In the past year, the North Dakota legislature has passed an act which provides for treatment of crippled children at any general hospital in the state upon commitment by district courts. Charges are to be referred to the counties in which the children reside. This legislation will function efficiently in proportion to the degree to which organized society is interested sufficiently to discover cases and bring them to the attention of judicial magistrates. Similar educational legislation should be enacted. The entire state of South Dakota still is devoid of special orthopedic facilities. In St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Shriners' Twin Cities Hospital, the Dowling School, the projected University of Minnesota Hospital and its convalescent institution, and the State Hospital will be adequate for the needs of this locality. In addition, the legislature of 1921 authorized subsidies for special schools for crippled children throughout the state. There remains only the need for social co-operation in organizing these classes and schools, and legislation which will make available the cost of remedying and caring for juvenile cripples in isolated community general hospitals.

Previous Page   Next Page

Pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  31  32  33  34    All Pages