To one who has been an eye-witness of
the wonderful achievements of American medical science in the conquest
of acute communicable and pestilential diseases in those regions of the
earth where they were supposed to be impregnably entrenched, there is
the strongest possible appeal in the present rapidly growing movement
for the improvement of physical efficiency and the conquest of chronic
diseases of the vital organs.
Through the patient, intelligent and
often heroic work of our army medical men, and the staff of the United
States Public Health Service, death-rates supposedly fixed have been
cut in half.
While it is true that to the public
mind there is a more lurid and spectacular menace in such diseases as
small-pox, yellow fever and plague, medical men and public health
workers are beginning to realize that, with the warfare against such
maladies well or ganized, it
is now time to give attention to the heavy loss from lowered physical
efficiency and chronic, preventable disease, a loss exceeding in
magnitude that sustained from the more widely feared communicable
diseases.
The insidious encroachment of the
chronic diseases that sap the vitality of the individual and impair the
efficiency of the race is a matter of increasing importance. The mere
extension of human life is not only in itself an end to be desired, but
the well digested scientific facts presented in this volume clearly
show that the most direct and effective means of lengthening human life
are at the same time those that make it more livable and add to its
power and capacity for achievement.
Many years ago, Disraeli, keenly alive
to influences affecting national prosperity, stated: “Public
Health is the foundation on which reposes the happiness of the people
and the power of a country. The care of the public health is the first
duty of a statesman.” It may well be claimed that the care of
individual and family health is the first and most patriotic duty of a
citizen.
These are the considerations that have
in fluenced me to
co-operate with the life extension movement, and to commend this volume
to the earnest consideration of all who desire authoritative guidance
in improving their own physical condition or in making effective the
knowledge now available for bringing health and happiness to our people.
WM.
H. TAFT.
New
Haven, June 12, 1915.