2)
CHAPTER XIV.
the time for inaction and delay is past and that, particularly in regard to
housing, it is imperative that an immediate beginning should be made.
To those who assert that India cannot afford to spend more on public
health. we would reply that she can no longer afford to do otherwise.
The Importance of Health.
In dealing with particular branches of industry we have had
occasion to refer to a number of specific subjects relating to health, more
particularly those concerning the worker while actually at work. We
deal in this chapter with the wider general subject of the health of the
industrial worker in its relation both to his welfare and to his work.
This is a matter of cardinal importance to the worker himself, but it is
scarcely less important to others directly or indirectly associated with
industrial development and national progress. Government, employers
and workers are all directly interested in promoting better standards of
life and in reducing the losses sustained through sickness, accident and
death in the industrial army. The problems associated with health are
always difficult ; they are much more so in a country where both climate
and the poverty and ignorance of the people contribute to recurring
outbreaks of tropical and other epidemic diseases.
Physique.
Before suggesting methods for improving the health of the indus-
brial worker, it is necessary to give some consideration to the important
questions of his physique and dietary. We have had some difficulty in
arriving at a fair estimate of the average physical condition, because of the
variations which exist between different sections of the population and,
indeed, between different races and castes working in the same industrial
concern. We have observed that many industrial workers are neither
the sons nor the grandsons of town-dwellers ; they have migrated from
the villages and have only temporarily severed their connection with the
land. They are to some extent selected immigrants. The move to the
city requires a certain degree of enterprise and courage ; and most of those
who go are, by their age and physique, better qualified than the average
villager to face the more trying conditions inherent in industrial life. In
addition the period of exile is often restricted in duration. The sowing and
harvesting seasons, sickness, news of the illness or death of a relative may
all lead to a return home. Some workers return every year, others every
two or three years, and there is a constant stream from village to city and
back again. These factors all play a selective part and tend to favour the
appearance of a moderately good physique in many of the men industrially
employed. Other influences work in an opposite direction. More often
than not the villager lives under a burden of debt, and economic pressure
and want compel a low standard of living which renders him unfit for hard
work. He has perforce to accustom himself to a diet deficient in quality
and often in quantity. Although cattle exist in enormous numbers, milk
supplies are inadequate, and the villager is rarely able to obtain a sufficiency
of the important animal fats contained in pure milk and ght. His staple
grain diet may be supplemented from one source or another with small