The Relative Mortality of Cancer in the General Population, and in the Mental Hospitals of England and Wales | Journal of Mental Science | Cambridge Core (original) (raw)

Extract

The periods under review were selected according to the availability of suitable material. Before the year 1907 and during the years of the Great War the number of deaths divided into suitable age-groups are not readily obtainable. The years immediately following the end of the war were considered to be unsuitable owing to the occurrence of epidemics of influenza.

Type

Part I.—Original Articles

Copyright

Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1934

References

Bashford, E., and Murray, J. A., Scient. Rep. Invest. Imp. Cancer Res. Fund, 1905, No. 2, .Google Scholar

Dunlop, J. C., Trans. Med.-Chir. Soc. Edin., 1929-30, xliv, p. 81.Google Scholar

Hoffman, F., cited by Wood, F. C., Amer. Journ. Pub. Health, 1930, xx, p. 11.Google Scholar

Infectious Diseases Sub-Committee, Royal Medico-Psychological Association, Report, Journ. Ment. Sei., 1930, lxxvi, p. 223.Google Scholar

King, G., and Newsholme, A., Proc. Roy. Soc, 1893, liv, p. 209.Google Scholar

Registrar-General, Annual Reports and Statistical Reviews, 1907–28.Google Scholar

Stock, P., and Karn, M. N., Ann. Eugenics, 1930-1, iv, p. 341.Google Scholar