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Comment:
Health, Disease, and Immigration Policy
ALAN M. KRAUT
IMMIGRATION LONG HAS inspired
fear in the hearts and minds of those charged with protecting the health
and well-being of the United States. The most obvious threat always seems
to come from those who are themselves the victims of infectious disease.
Since the Middle Ages, fear of contagion inspired quarantine of travelers
who appeared symptomatic and often those who did not yet appear to be
sick. On this side of the Atlantic, seventeenth-century British colonies
had quarantine laws on their books which became state laws after the American
Revolution and laid the foundation for federal regulations. Later, medical
inspections, such as those conducted at Ellis Island and other federal
immigration depots, supplemented quarantine procedures. However, as Doug
Baynton observes in this paper and a previously published article, by
the nineteenth century concern extended far beyond infectious diseases
that immigrants might bring, such as cholera and smallpox, and included
disabling physical and mental conditions with their attendant social costs.
Some Americans were unsympathetic to such new arrivals. In my own work,
I quote an 1888 report delivered to the annual conference of superintendents
of institutions for the feeble-minded clamoring for immigration restriction,
lest the country find itself unable to bear the cost of institutional
facilities needed to treat or at least confine the "sewage of vice and
crime and physical weakness" washing ashore from Europe and the "nameless
abominations" floating in from Asia.
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