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35 results for "Public health--Laws and legislation"
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Record #:
17929
Abstract:
One of the most voluminous bills to be passed by the 1957 North Carolina General Assembly completely rewrote the public health laws of North Carolina, some of which were dated from the 1700s. Some of the major changes involved administration, the development of health departments, immunization, infectious and venereal disease, mosquito control, and sanitation districts to name a few.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 24 Issue 1, Sept 1957, p46-48, 57
Record #:
17824
Abstract:
North Carolina 1955 General Assembly faced a number of changes in bills related to mental health, persons with tuberculosis, and provisions for obtaining vital statistics.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 21 Issue 9, June 1955, p27-29, 34
Record #:
17681
Abstract:
Cochrane discusses the changes in health from the beginning of North Carolina's history to the present. Laws have been and still continue to be changed in hopes of coinciding with changes in public health.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 20 Issue 7, Apr 1954, p7-9
Record #:
17605
Abstract:
Municipal authorities and civic-minded citizens alike have long been frustrated in their attempts to keep vacant city lots from becoming jungles of weeds; however, city officials are hesitant to utilize ordinances that may exercise too much of the state's power for aesthetic purposes. Thus, the authorities of the Wilmington-New Hanover City-County Health Department are approaching the problem from health perspective to garner support for tackling the weeds.
Source:
Record #:
17228
Abstract:
When the legislature convened everyone knew that North Carolina's program for health and hospitals would come in for a major consideration given war-time conditions. At the 1945 General Assembly, a foundation was laid for extensive future development.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 11 Issue 2-7, July 1945, p17-18, 59-60