Jean, Sally Lucas (1878–1971)

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Jean, Sally Lucas (1878–1971)

American nurse. Born Sally Lucas Jean, June 18, 1878, in Towson, MD; died July 5, 1971, in New York, NY; dau. of George and Emilie Watkins (Selby) Jean; graduate of Maryland Homoepathic Training School for Nurses (1898); shared a home with close friend Dorothy Goodwin, her secretary.

Coiner of the term "health education," 1st served as an army nurse in the south during Spanish-American War; became director of Maryland Social Health Service (1914); organized People's Institute Department of Health Service in NY (1917); served on New York Academy of Medicine's Committee on Wartime Problems of Childhood, which led to the establishment of the Child Health Organization (CHO, 1918), and was its 1st director; when American Child Hygiene Association merged with CHO to form American Child Health Association (1923), served as director of its Health Education (1 yr); developed health education programs in China, Japan, Philippines, Virgin Islands and Panama Canal Zone; worked as a health consultant to companies (e.g., Quaker Oats); directed health education work for National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (1944).

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