130 SOCIAL SCIENTIST
1971); Joseph R Quinn (ed.), Medicine and Public Health in the People's Republic of China, US Department of Health, Education and Welfare Publication, no* (NIH) 72-67, Washington 1972; Myron B Wegman, Tsung-yi Lin, and Elizabeth F Purcell (eds.). Public Health in the People's Republic of China, Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation, New York 1973; Joseph R Quinn (ed.), China Medicine af We Saw It, US Department of Health, Education and Welfare Publication, no. (NIH) 75-684, Washington 1974; and Victor W Sidel and Ruth Sidel, Serve the People: Observations on Medicine in the People's Republic of China, Beacon Press, Boston 1974.
2 Chinese Medical Association, ^'Child Health t^are in New China" reprinted in The American Journal of Chinese Medicine, vol 2 no 2 1975, pp 149-58; 'f China Achieves Initial Success in Planned Population Growth", Hsinhua News Agency, Peking, News Release no. 082302,-23 August 1974; and data given the authors by the Department of Public Health, Shanghai. Comparisons with other cities are presented in Sidel and Sidel, op cit.
8 Leo Orleans, "Medical Education and Manpower in Communist China", in G T Hu (ed.), Aspects of Chinese Education, Teachers College Press, Colombia University, New York 1969, pp 27-8.
4 Ibid., p 37.
5 F Avery Jones, '^A Visit to China", British Medical Journal, vol 2, November 1975, pp 1105-7.
6 Chang Tze-k'uan, "The Department of Hospital Services in China", Chinese Medical Journal, vol 84, 1965, pp 412-16.
7 The Fengsheng neighbourhood is described in greater detail in Ruth Sidel, Families of Fen^sheng: Urban Life in China, Penguin Books, Batimore (Maryland) 1974.
8 '^One and a Half Million Barefoot Doctors in China", Peking Review, 20 August 1976, pp 14-16.
9 Horn, op.cit., p 96.
10 Virginia Li Wang, "Food Distribution as a Guarantee for Nutrition and Health:
China's Experience". Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly — Health and Society, Spring 1976, pp 145-165.