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Titles
- A profile of Florida’s low-wage uninsured workers1
- A winter in the West Indies and Florida: containing general observations upon modes of travelling, manners and customs, climates and productions, with a particular description of St. Croix, Trinidad de Cuba, Havana, Key West, and St. Augustine, as places of resort for northern invalids1
- Additional mounds of Duval and of Clay Counties, Florida ; Mound investigation on the east coast of Florida ; Certain Florida coast mounds north of the St. Johns River1
- An account of the fresh-water shell-heaps of the St. Johns River, East Florida1
- An address on the climatology of Florida: delivered before the Medical Association of the State of Florida, at their Annual Meeting, held in the City of Jacksonville, on the 17th and 18th February, 18751
- As to yellow fever1
- Challenges associated with applying for health insurance among Latina mothers in California, Florida, and New York1
- Child health services in Florida: report of the Florida State Pediatric Association study of child health services, made in cooperation with the Florida State Board of Health1
- Cinchonia, alkaloid and mixture: its use in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida1
- Climates of Florida and the West Indies1
- Climatological and sanitary report of Florida1
- County health officer's manual1
- Creating better systems of care for adults with disabilities: lessons for policy and practice1
- Evaluation of Wyman's Teen Outreach Program in Florida: findings from the replication of an evidence-based teen pregnancy prevention program : final impact report for Florida Department of Health1
- Florida as a health-resort1
- Florida state sanitary code: established by the State Board of Health as prescribed by law1
- Florida state sanitary code: established by the State Board of Health, under authority of chapter 19366, Acts of Legislature, 19391
- Florida's school health program: Florida program for improvement of schools1
- Florida: Latino children's health coverage facts1
- Four states reviewed received increased Medicaid COVID-19 funding even though they terminated some enrollees’ coverage for unallowable or potentially unallowable reasons1