Above left: Dr. Norman Boyer discusses a medical problem with an employee. Above right: Nurse Peggy Loftis checks the vision of Charley Brewer, a for mer employe and Korean War Veteran who is returning to work at Ecusta. Left: The Medical Center’s Waiting Room (foreground) and receiving station. On the Cover: Mrs. Jeanette Paxton, Medical Center Nurse, gives Gilbert Huggins (Paper Inspection) an inoculation against tetanus, one of five vac cines available to employees. Others are: Typhoid, Flu, Smallpox, Typhus. One of the memorable events in a man’s life is his first day on a new job. What he experiences on that day makes an impression that will last as long as he is with the organization. After a new man visits our employment office, the first thing that he sees, or probably knows about us, is our Medical Center. This man, one of 1,750,000 young people who enter America’s work force each year, gets his physical examina tion in one of the best industrial medical depart- i . OUR MODERN MEDICAL PROGRAM IS FIVE YEARS OLD THIS MONTH j I i [ ments in the nation. What he sees there, and learns about us and our medical program, will not soon be forgotten. This young man is more fortunate than most of us were when we came to Ecusta. Those who are members of either the Five or Ten Year Serv ice clubs will remember when our program did not include a complete pre-employment physical. The small, inadequately staffed first aid station handled the usual on-the-job injuries and illnesses. The medical personnel didn’t have time for thor ough physical examinations, so no attempt was made for periodic examinations. The medical program that a new employee will see in operation today is five years old this month. During this comparatively short time, there has been a vast change in the scope and nature of it. Where the old program was concerned primarily with the treatment of injuries and illnesses, the new concept is a program of preventive medicine —to help employees maintain good health so that they will be effective and happy at work, as well as in their home and community life. From 1939 through 1948, the cases handled by our medical department were 2 to 1 injuries and illnesses over personal medical problems. Since January, 1949, there has been a gradual change in the character of visits of employees to the depart ment, until now the personal cases outnumber all others 6 to 1. When the new program first got underway our doctors were averaging two minor operations daily. Now operations are seldom per formed. This denotes a decided change when we CONTINUED . .