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ANNEX 6

Department of State Advisory Health Group

October 11-12, 1945, Washington, D.C.

Margaret Arnstein, Consultant Public Health Nurse, State of New York Department of Health

Dr. Walter L. Bierring, Commissioner, Iowa State Department of Health

Dr. E. L. Bishop, Director of Health, Tennessee Valley Authority

Arch Booth, Assistant General Manager, United States Chamber of Commerce Dr. Frank G. Boudreau, Director, Milbank Memorial Fund

Dr. Hugh S. Cumming, Director, Pan American Sanitary Bureau

Nelson H. Cruikshank, Director, Social Insurance Activities, American Federation of Labor

Dr. Wilburt C. Davison, Dean, Duke University School of Medicine
Mrs. LaFell Dickinson, President, General Federation of Women's Clubs

Dr. Luis I. Dublin, Second Vice President and Statistician, Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co.

Dr. Martha M. Eliot, Associate Chief, Children's Bureau, Department of Labor Dr. Kendall Emerson, Managing Director, National Tuberculosis Association Dr. Morris Fishbein, Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association Howard W. Green, Secretary, Cleveland Health Council

George T. Guernsey, Assistant Director of Education, Congress of Industrial Organizations

Rear Adm. John Harper, Chief of Professional Division, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department

Dr. Victor Heiser, National Association of Manufacturers

Maj. Gen. Norman T. Kirk, Surgeon General, United States Army
Dr. John W. Lawlah, Dean, Howard University School of Medicine
Dr. Ross A. McFarland, Medical Coordinator, Pan American Airways
Dr. G. Ford McGinnes, National Medical Director, American Red Cross
Dr. A. A. Moll, Assistant Director, Pan American Sanitary Bureau
Dr. Joseph E. Moore, Director of Syphilology, Johns Hopkins University
Dr. John Musser, Professor of Medicine, Tulane University
Basil O'Connor, Chairman, American Red Cross

Dr. Lowell J. Reed, Dean, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health
Brig. Gen. James S. Simmons, Chief, Preventive Medicine Service, United States
Army

Dr. Edward A. Strecker, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania Dr. George Strode, Director, International Health Division, Rockefeller Foundation

Howard Strong, United States Chamber of Commerce

Dr. William H. Taliaferro, Department of Bacteriology and Parasitology, University of Chicago

Dr. Russell M. Wilder, Mayo Clinic

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Dr. C-E. A. Winslow, Editor, American Journal of Public Health

Abel Wolman, Professor of Sanitary Engineering, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health

Department of State

Dean Acheson, Under Secretary of State

William T. Ham, Acting Chief, Division of International Labor, Social and Health Affairs

Philip Burnett, Division of International Organization Affairs

Marcia Maylott, Division of International Organization Affairs

Emma Joyce, Health Counselor, Division of Departmental Personnel

Dr. L. L. Williams, Jr., Division of International Labor, Social and Health Affairs

Dr. H. van Zile Hyde, Division of International Labor, Social and Health Affairs H. B. Calderwood, Division of International Labor, Social and Health Affairs

United States Public Health Service

Dr. Thomas Parran, Surgeon General, Chairman

Dr. James A. Doull, Chief, Office of International Health Relations

Dr. James A. Crabtree, Office of Surgeon General

Dr. Michael B. Shimkin, Office of International Health Relations

Jean Henderson, Director, Division of Public Relations

ANNEX 7

A Resolution

Department of State Advisory Health Group

October 12, 1945, Washington, D. C.

The chaotic conditions created by recent world events, with the resultant disruption of health services, make imperative prompt action for the establishment of an international organization concerned with the prevention of disease and the promotion of health for all the people of the world.

Among the peoples of the occupied nations, such conditions as tuberculosis, malnutrition, dysentery, venereal diseases, malaria, mental disturbances, and similar diseases have increased alarmingly. Failure to exert suitable control and to apply the knowledge and resources now possessed by medical and public health agencies will menace the health of all the people of the world and postpone economic recovery. In much of our world, modern methods of sanitation, which include purification of water supply, disposal of sewage, and the prevention of dissemination of diseases by insect and rodent pests, have never been fully developed and in some areas are practically nonexistent. Moreover, as a result of the effects of high explosives and military activities, sanitary systems in many nations have been destroyed or rendered inefficient. The advancement of sanitation in those countries not yet efficient in this regard and the repair and restoration of such installations in other countries are an immediate health problem.

Modern methods of transportation have greatly intensified communication between the peoples of all portions of the world, with the possibility of wide spread of disease formerly limited to definite geographic areas. Distance is no longer a barrier against the dissemination of disease.

Previous international organizations, even on a more limited scale, have definitely established the vital importance of such agencies as a mechanism for improving public health and maintaining safety. From a scientific and technical point of view, the most effective functioning of any international health organization requires participation of all the nations of the world. Such international health organizations promote international good will and understanding.

Action at the earliest possible occasion is necessary to maintain the continuity of such international services as have been or may now be rendered by the Office of Public Hygiene in Paris, the health section of the League of Nations, the Pan American Sanitary Bureau, the League of Red Cross Societies, and the health organization of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. Some of these activities have lapsed or deteriorated during the war and others were established on a temporary basis.

The advisory health group, assembled by the Department of State in Washington, urges the President of the United States, the Congress of the United States, the Department of State, and all executive agencies to take prompt and effective action toward the achievement, at the earliest possible date, of the assembling of an international health conference for the adoption of a constitution for an international health organization.

ANNEX 8

Senate Joint Resolution 89-Seventy-ninth

Congress

Relative to the Formation of an International
Health Organization

WHEREAS pestilence, disease, malnutrition, and death therefrom know no frontiers; and

WHEREAS the pressing health and medical-social problems of the world will continue for years to come; and

WHEREAS health is essential for the well-being, progress, and prosperity of nations and for good relations between nations; and

WHEREAS the reconstruction of national and international health services and the solution of health problems would be a significant contribution to world peace; and

WHEREAS no single international health organization now exists which can coordinate effectively national and international health programs and organizations; and

WHEREAS the United Nations Conference in San Francisco adopted a recommendation to convene a conference to draw up the statutes of an International Health Organization: Therefore be it

Resolved By the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there should be the speedy convening of such a conference and the early formation of an International Health Organization as one of the objectives of the United Nations Organization, and that the President is hereby requested, on behalf of the Government of the United States, to urge upon the United Nations Organization the prompt convening of such conference and the formation of such an organization.

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