Abstract
WHEN my long-time friend and colleague, John Gordon, asked me to give the Cutter Lecture this year, he explained that today he would be out of the country working on a project supported by the Rockefeller Foundation. He asked me to discuss the "existing position of public health in the approach to a control of chronic disease"; to "sum up what came out of the meetings themselves" at the Conference on the Care of the Long-Term Patient in Chicago in March, 1954; and to "give an assay of what needs to be done." It will be agreed that this was . . .

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