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  2. Social hygiene movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_hygiene_movement

    Poster for the Hygiene Congress in Hamburg, 1912 "Sex hygiene" is contrasted with "false modesty" in this frontispiece to an early 20th-century book.. In the United States, the social hygiene movement was an attempt by Progressive era reformers in the late 19th and early 20th century to control venereal disease, regulate prostitution and vice, and disseminate sexual education through the use ...

  3. Austen Riggs Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austen_Riggs_Center

    Riggs was influenced by the mental hygiene movement (also known as the social hygiene movement). He developed his residential model after observing a physician in Bethel , Maine named John George Gehring, who treated patients through strict daily regimens and treatments through suggestion.

  4. American Sexual Health Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Sexual_Health...

    The American Sexual Health Association (ASHA), formally known as the American Social Hygiene Association and the American Social Health Association, is an American nonprofit organization established in 1914, that cites a mission to improve the health of individuals, families, and communities, with an emphasis on sexual health, as well as a focus on preventing sexually transmitted infections ...

  5. Community-led total sanitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community-led_total_sanitation

    Combined with hygiene education, the approach aims to make the entire community realize the severe health impacts of open defecation. Since individual carelessness may affect the entire community, pressure on each person becomes stronger to follow sanitation principles such as using sanitary toilets, washing hands, and practicing good hygiene.

  6. Comstock Act of 1873 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comstock_Act_of_1873

    The last section of the Comstock Act is found at 39 U.S.C. § 3001 in subsection (e), and it declares that unsolicited contraceptives are non-mailable unless the addressee is a manufacturer or trader in contraceptives, a physician, a nurse, a pharmacist, a hospital, or a clinic. [29]

  7. State health agency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_health_agency

    Although the vast majority of these agencies are officially called "departments," the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials adopted "state health agency" as the generic term to reflect the fact that a substantial number of these agencies are no longer state "departments" in the traditional sense of a cabinet-level organizational unit dedicated exclusively to public health. [2]

  8. Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reproductive_Health...

    The LEAP (Landscape and Projection of Reproductive Health Supply Needs) Data Report [12] is an interactive data tool that estimates future use and cost of reproductive health supplies in four key health areas – contraception, menstrual hygiene, abortion and post-abortion care, and maternal health. The report looks into what services or ...

  9. Chamberlain–Kahn Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamberlain–Kahn_Act

    The Chamberlain–Kahn Act of 1918 is a U.S. federal law passed on July 9, 1918, by the 65th United States Congress.The law implemented a public health program that came to be known as the American Plan, whose stated goal was to combat the spread of venereal disease.