ata
ما
1504.
& Bull
516
| | | | | | | | | | | | |.....................
12973
A.
74 2.
A.
Mr Lau Chu Pak:-
A.
The Chairman:
authority. If he agrees with the diagnosis made, he gives his instructions with regard to the removal of the parient and so on, and he reports the case to the Sanitary Authority. With regard to any nuisance, he goes and sends an Inspector, and he is responsibl#, and he reports to the Board and advises them as to the steps to take, and under which section of the Aot. I take it that all this supervision of infectious diseases, and examination of nuisances, would be done by the M. 0. H. himself. He would not delegate these duties to an Inspector ↑
12.973
No. Everything to do with infectious disease would be seen by him, and most nuisances, unless of a very
trumpery nature.
-
12974
anything requiring But if there is anything important reconstruction such as a defective drạn, he would examine it himself?
·
He would see that himself, and any adulteration of food, and some M. 0. He have to do the analyses
themselves.
12.975
He has to go round and satisfy himself in every case ↑
In almost every case,
}
باد
A.
In typhoid and scarlet fever, and such diseases, he
12976 would as a matter of course, visit the house himself ↑
Yes.
12977
Q.
7
He would not leave it to an Inspector, whose qualific» ations are not medical at all ?
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE
Reference:-
C.O. 537
36
A.
He would go into the place himself, and endeavour to
trace the origin of the disease.
12978
I take
A.
What duties would be leave for his Inspectora ? it, we speak of a class of Inspector at home, who is pretty much the same glass of man, as we have here. They are not perhaps the same class. They go about, and find out whether nuisances do exist, and if they
RECORD OFFICE, LONDON
OUT PERMISSION OF THE PUBLIC
CON MIGHT PHOTOGRAPHICALLY WITH-
PHOTOGRAPH - NOT TO BE
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