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Chapter 1 presents the historical context and the key players who called for statistics to be collected as part of the interwar public health programs presented in later chapters. Striving to promote the health of “others” – poor rural communities, or people in foreign countries – using scientific methods, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Milbank Memorial Fund provided support to statistical initiatives with the help of bacteriologists trained in laboratory methods, who aimed to extend those principles to the social world. Missionaries’ sons born in China – with knowledge both of Chinese conditions and North American public health training – made implementation of such programs possible in China. It was these driving forces that enabled these public health programs, including related statistical practices.
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