The paper deals with the mortality and sickness of merchant seamen and with certain other matters that were connected in one way or another with the main subject.
The work underlying the paper was undertaken for the Ministry of War Transport (now the Ministry of Transport) and a report differing little from the present paper was completed in March 1946. I am much indebted to the Minister of Transport for leave to publish the information and for his interest in the work. I should also like to put on record the encouragement I received at an earlier stage from his predecessor and throughout from Sir Cyril Hurcomb, the Secretary (Director General) of the Ministry. Though I am, of course, responsible for the statistical analysis, I have had much help and criticism from the Registrar-General of Shipping and Seamen, Mr W. J. Killingback, M.B.E. Both he and the office of the Registrar-General of Shipping and Seamen at Cardiff, especially Mr C. F. Knight, have given me valuable information and advice without which I should have been in still greater difficulty in understanding and interpreting the statistics. Mr E. A. J. Heath, F.I.A., who was an Assistant Statistical Adviser at the Ministry, made the analyses of the discharges on grounds of ill health which are given in paragraphs 15–18 and in Tables 6 and 7. His experience of permanent sickness insurance was a valuable asset; he also helped in other ways in connexion with the work.