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Tuberculosis in children

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 21 Collections and/or Records:

Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak, 1916 October 23

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0112.0142.00008
Abstract

Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak from the JCRS superintendent that the Malbin children are not a danger to infection the other children at the Sheltering home and that he had informed Mrs. Fannie Lorber.

Dates: 1916 October 23

Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak, 1916 October 27

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0112.0142.00009
Abstract

Letter to Dr. C. D. Spivak from JCRS superintendent that Ida Malbin had been transferred to the Denver Sheltering Home.

Dates: 1916 October 27

Letter to Rabbi A. B. Rhine, 1916 October 11

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0112.0142.00005
Abstract

Letter to Rabbi A. B. Rhine from JCRS informing him that Dora Malbin and her two children, Ida and Sammy, have been admitted to the JCRS.

Dates: 1916 October 11

Letter to Secretary Mr. N. Halpern, 1916 October 23

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0112.0142.00007
Abstract

Letter to Secretary Mr. N. Halpern from Dr. Spivak at the JCRS stating the Malbin children, Ida and Sammy, are free of infectious disease.

Dates: 1916 October 23

Letter to Superintendent Dr. M. I. Marshak, 1916 October 20

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0112.0142.00006
Abstract

Letter to Superintendent Dr. M. I. Marshak of the JCRS asking for his opinion as to if the Malbin children are well enough to go to the Denver Sheltering Home.

Dates: 1916 October 20

Nathan Rapaport's Application for Admission to JCRS, 1911 September 15

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0104.0155.00014
Abstract Application form of Nathan Rapaport for admission as a patient to the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society. He was age 22 at the time of the application. He was born in Russia and immigrated to the United States in 1905. He lived in Newark, New Jersey when he contracted tuberculosis. He had been sick for three years upon his arrival to Denver, Colorado. He was married. His occupation states he worked as a peddler. He was in the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives in Denver, as well as...
Dates: 1911 September 15

National Jewish Hospital Records

 Collection
Identifier: B005
Abstract In 1899, the Jewish community erected the non-sectarian National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives (NJH), the first sanatorium in Denver, Colorado, for tuberculosis victims. With the financial assistance of the International B'nai B'rith fraternal organization, patients from all over the U.S. were admitted free of charge. The NJH adopted a program that emphasized the benefits of fresh air, proper nutrition, and rest. The hospital was founded by a group of Jewish residents of Denver who were...
Dates: 1892-2017

Oral History Interview with Anne Niblock, 1978 October 25

 Item
Identifier: B098.12.0010.00004
Abstract

Anne talks about coming to Denver to finish her degree at the University of Denver and started working for National Jewish Hospital as the only teacher for the students grades 1-7, all the children were patients at the Hospital, she functioned as a teacher, foster mother, counselor; associated with the Denver Public School System.

Dates: 1978 October 25

Oral History Interview with Sol Abraham, 1984 October 1

 Item
Identifier: B098.01.0005.00124
Abstract "Sol Z. Abraham describes his early education in New York after emigrating with his parents from Austria when he was 11 years old. He discusses the effect that contracting tuberculosis had on his early life, and details the various treatments and surgeries he underwent to treat the disease while at National Jewish Hospital (NJH). He talks about his later employment at NJH and the variety of positions he held there from 1935 until his retirement forty years later in 1975. He also articulates...
Dates: 1984 October 1

Prescription Note from E. Friedman to C.D. Spivak, 1911 September 14

 Item
Identifier: B002.01.0104.0155.00013
Abstract

Prescription note from Dr. Emanuel Friedman to C.D. Spivak. Friedman informs Spivak that Nathan Rapaport is suffering from tuberculosis and advises Spivak that he should be admitted to the sanatorium as an emergency case.

Dates: 1911 September 14