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THE report of the President's Commission on Heart Disease, Cancer and Stroke, published in late 1964, has proposed a program to effect a reduction of unnecessary deaths from heart disease, cancer and stroke, through the establishment of a network of centers for investigation, training and treatment. Evidence, mostly in the form of death rates, was presented to demonstrate the major importance of these three causes of death. The Commission stated that the federal Government has the responsibility of assuring immediate application of scientific advances to medical care. These proposals must be evaluated critically in relation to both the realism of . . .
Burgess et al. (Thu,) studied this question.