“…It is not known how man becomes infected. Serological and skin test surveys show that evidence of sub‐clinical infection increases with increasing age and that between a quarter and a half of the adult population of this country may have been at one time infected (Fisher, 1951 and Cathie and Dudgeon, 1953). As with syphilis, there are congenital and acquired forms.…”
IT IS not the purpose of this report to attempt to cover all the recent progress that has been made in paediatrics, but to select a few of those changing attitudes and advances that particularly concern the general practitioner.
“…It is not known how man becomes infected. Serological and skin test surveys show that evidence of sub‐clinical infection increases with increasing age and that between a quarter and a half of the adult population of this country may have been at one time infected (Fisher, 1951 and Cathie and Dudgeon, 1953). As with syphilis, there are congenital and acquired forms.…”
IT IS not the purpose of this report to attempt to cover all the recent progress that has been made in paediatrics, but to select a few of those changing attitudes and advances that particularly concern the general practitioner.
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