Public health as a discipline grew out of traditional Western medicine but expanded to include interests in social policy, hygiene, epidemiology, infectious disease, sanitation, and health education. This book, the first of a two-volume set, is a collection of important and representative historical texts that serve to trace and to illuminate the development of conceptions, policies, and treatments in public health from the dawn of Western civilization through the Progressive Era of the early twentieth century.
The editors provide annotated readings and biographical details to punctuate the historical timeline and to provide students with insights into the progression of ideas, initiatives, and reforms in the field. From Hippocrates and John Graunt in the early period, to John Snow and Florence Nightingale during the nineteenth-century sanitary reform movement, to Upton Sinclair and Margaret Sanger in the Progressive Era, readers follow the identification, evolution, and implementation of public health concepts as they came together under one discipline.
FOREWORD by Warren Winkelstein Jr. PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS INTRODUCTION CHRONOLOGY
PART 1 Early Roots
1 HIPPOCRATES On Airs, Waters, and Places 2 JOHN GRAUNT Natural and Political Observations Mentioned in a Following Index, and Made Upon the Bills or Mortality (1662, Abriged) 3 JAMES LIND A Treatise on the Scurvy (1753, Abriged) 4 GEORGE BAKER An Essay Concernong the Cause of the Endemial Colic of Devonshire (1767) 5 PERCIVAL POTT Cancer Scroti (c. 1775) 6 EDWARD JENNER An Inquiry Into The Causes And Effects Of The Variolae Vaccinae: A Disease Discovered In Some Of The Western Counties Of England, Partucularly Gloucestershire, And Known By The Name Of the Cow-Pox (1798) 7 PETER LUDWIG PANUM Observations Made During the Epidemic of Measles on the Faroe Islands in the Year 1846 (1847, Abriged)
PART 2 The Sanitary Reform Movement
8 WILLIAM FARR Lecture Introduction to a Course on Hygeine, or the Preservation of The Public Health On the "Table of Mortality" for the Metropolis (1840) A Short Method of Constructing Life Tables (1845) 9 EDWIN CHADWICK Report on the Sanitarty Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain and On the Means of Its Improvement (1842, Abriged) A Supplementary Report on the Results of a Special Inquiry into the Practice of Interment in Towns 10 JOHN SIMON Excerpts from City of London Medical Reports (1849, 1850, 1852, Abriged) 11 LEMUEL sHATTUCK Report on the Sanitary Commission of Massachucetts 1850 (1850, Abriged) 12 JOHN SNOW On The Mode Of Communication Of Cholera (1854, Abriged) 13 EDWARD JARVIS Insanity and Idiocy in Massachucetts—Report on the Commission on Lunacy, 1855 14 WILLIAM BUDD Typhoid Fever—Its Nature, Mode of Spreading, and Prevention (1873) 15 FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE Sanitart Condition of Hospitals and Hospital Construction (1859) 16 IGNÁC SEMMELWEIS The Etiology, COncept and Prophylaxis of Childbed Fever (1860, Abriged) 17 ROBERT KOCH The Aetiology of Tuberculosis On Bacteriological Research
PART 3 The Progressive Era
18 JACOB A. RIIS How the Other Half Lives (1890, Abriged) 19 UPTON SINCLAIR The Jungle (1905, Abriged) 20 ABRAHAM FLEXNER Medical Education in the United States & Canada: A Report to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (1910, Abriged) 21 JOSEPH GOLDBERGER The Etiology of Pellagra: The Significance of Certain Epidemiological Observations With Respect Thereto (1914) 22 MARGARET SANGER Family Limitation (c. 1915) 23 ALICE HAMILTON Women in the Lead Industries (1919) 24 ARIEL WOLMAN Chlorine Absorption and the Chlorination of Water
AFTERWORD APPENDIX I APPENDIX II NOTES INDEX ABOUT THE EDITORS
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