9
MAJORITY REPORT.
em
a
are then made to discover the source of infection and to
ensure that all precautions desirable to prevent the further
spread of infection are taken. Occasionally these inquiries
disclose an urgent need for wide investigation and prompt
action, as for instance where there is reason to suspect that
water supplies, milk supplies, or oyster layings have become
contaminated. The Medical Officer of Health is prepared to
assist a medical practitioner in the diagnosis of a dangerous
disease, such as smallpox, if requested.
(2) To provide facilities for the isolation and treatment in
hospital of persons suffering from acute infectious diseases
who cannot be properly isolated and treated at home. The
powers of Section 131 of the Public Health Act, 1875, to
provide isolation hospitals are permissive and not mandatory,
and some districts are still without any means of isolating
cases of infectious disease. Provision is made in the Public
Health Acts and in the Isolation Hospitals Acts for the for-
mation of Joint Boards or Joint Committees for the purpose
of providing and maintaining hospitals for the common use
of two or more sanitary districts, and the Minister of Health
has, in some instances, made regulations under Section 2 of
the Public Health (Prevention and Treatment of Diseases)
Act, 1913, authorising a County Council to provide an isola-
tion hospital for the whole or part of the County.
43. Tn the year 1921-22 expenditure on the provision and
maintenance of isolation hospitals amounted to about £4,320,000,
of which only about £4,200 was met out of Exchequer grants.
Tae ScHOOL MEDICAL SERVICE.
44. Passing now to the school medical service we find that
the authorities responsible for this administration are the Local
Education Authorities which are the Councils of all Counties and
County Boroughs and of certain non-County Boroughs and Urban
Districts. These Authorities exercise their powers in all cases
through statutory Committees appointed for the purpose. All
school children are medically examined at entrance to school, at
the age of 8, and at the age of 12, on the basis of a model
schedule issued by the Board of Fducation, which is in general
use in nearly every area. Any children who appear at any
time to be ailing are also submitted to medical examination,
and any child in whom a defect is found is reinspected sub-
sequently. In such cases the parents are informed and are
advised to have the defect remedied, and school nurses follow up
the cases to see that the necessary treatment is provided. The
parents are expected, if able to do so, to provide the treatment
themselves, but where they are unable, for any reason, to secure
the necessary treatment, the Local Education Authority pro-
vides treatment for the following types of defect: minor ail-