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From the early decades of the XX century there is constant references in the works of hygienists and pediatricians to preventable illness and death. Although it is clear that the first signs of this change of attitude appeared in the modern period, specially in the Enlightement in the second half of XVIII century, it was not until the XX century that the problem achieved real political visibility, with wider dimensions, and that society internalized child protection as a subject of prime urgency. Leagues against infant mortality and the movements of child protection proliferated in different countries.