the less acculturatedislanders to accept change, indefinitely postponed permanent improvement. Conclusion The health program established and expanded by the Navy during its administration of the islands was successful considering the immensity of the problem and the few years that the program was in effect. The statistics of treatments, cures, facilities and training are impressive but no person connected with the program consideredthat anything but a beginning had been made in eliminating prevalent diseases and acquainting the inhabitantsof the islands with the basic reasons for acceptance of American health standards. Working contrary to the progress of the program were many of the same difficulties that hindered endeavor in other fields of native administration. The problems of transportation and communication made satisfactory conduct of medical andsanitation programs on outlying islands always a problem. Lack of laboratory facilities in the field and nonavailability of skilled nursing limited diagnostic and therapeutic work. Language difficulties sometimes complicatedtreatmentbecause, as one medical officer commented, “Taking a psychiatric history throughan interpreter is an unparalleled intellectual: feat.” The permanent successof the health program for the Trust Territory depended to a great extent uponits acceptance and continuancebythe islanders themselves. Fach year the number of people voluntarily seeking assistance from the administration's health services increased and the influence of unqualified indigenouspractitioners, the so-called “witch doctors,” progressively decreased. At no time did the administration attempt by legislation to forbid the practice of traditional island medicine, but if at any time such practice endangered the welfare of the people, medical officers resolved the problem through consultation with local communityofficials. | A naval medical officer who served in the Marshall Islands noted that desirable health standards in the islands could be reached only by progress in an “individual trinity:” education, public demand, and economy. Education would furnish knowledge of the basic theories of health and sanitation and result in public demand for the program. Island economy, which should provide more than subsistence for health, would include “better housing, clean food and clothing, shoes. balanced diets, clean water stowage, sanitary waste disposal, immu947 s0ChO85

Select target paragraph3