History of medicine and health care 2013 Honors College; History 1090; Sociology 1488; shrs 2906 coordinators: Jonathon Erlen, Ph. D. 648-8927-office


“The danger from transmission of infectious materials by mail.” Reprinted from February 11, 1911 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 304(6): 626



Download 0.81 Mb.
Page19/27
Date14.08.2017
Size0.81 Mb.
#31943
1   ...   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   ...   27

“The danger from transmission of infectious materials by mail.” Reprinted from February 11, 1911 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 304(6): 626.

“The public and the public health.” Reprinted from July 8, 1911. JAMA, 2011, 306(2): 217.


Adams, Samuel H. “Public health and public hysteria.” American Journal of Public Health, 1911, reprinted 2010, 100(8): 1388-1391.
“Sociology and medicine.” Reprinted from April 15, 1911 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 305(14): 1493.
“Impure air and medicine.” Reprinted from May 13, 1911 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 305(18): 1918.
“The public and public health.” Reprinted from Jul 8, 1911 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 306(2): 217.
Blue, Rupert. “Urgent public health needs of the nation.” .” American Journal of Public Health 1919 (9): 98-103.
Harding, Warren G. “A half century of public health.” Excerpted from: Stephen Smith, “Semicentennial Banquet: A Half Century of Public Health,” American Journal of Public Health. 1923, 12: 3–6. American Journal of Public Health, 2011, 101(11): 2055-2057.

Salk, Jonas E. “Vaccination against paralytic poliomyelitis performance and prospects.” American Journal of Public Health, 1955, 45(5): 575-596.


Van Riper, Hart E. “Practical experience with poliomyelitis vaccine: Questions and answers.” American Journal of Public Health, 1956, May:563-574.
Korns, Robert F. “The Health Officer's Dilemma on Poliomyelitis Vaccine.” American Journal of Public Health 1955 (45): 1062-1064.
Salk, Jonas E. “Poliomyelitis Vaccine in the Fall of 1955.” American Journal of Public Health 1956 (46): 1-14.
____________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________
Blake, John B. "The origins of public health in the United States." American Journal of Public Health 1948 (38): 1539-1550.
Kramer, Howard. "Early municipal and state boards of health." Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 1950 (24): 503-529.
Duffy, John. "Hogs, dogs, and dirt: Public health in early Pittsburgh." Pittsburgh Magazine of History and Biography 1963 (87): 294-305.
Cornely, Paul B. “The health status of the negro today and in the future.” Excerpted from: Paul B. Cornely, “The Health Status of the Negro Today and in the Future,” American Journal of Public Health, 1968, 58(4):647–654- American Journal of Public Health, 2011, Vol. 101(No. S1): S161-S163.

Ellis, John. "Business and public health in the urban South during the Nineteenth Century: New Orleans, Memphis, and Atlanta." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1970 (44): 197-212.


Williams, Greer. "Schools of public health--their doing and undoing." Milbank Quarterly, 1976 (54): 480-525.
Fox, Daniel M. "Social policy and city politics." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 415-431, 1978 edition.
Rosenberg, Charles E. “The cause of cholera: aspects of etiological thought in 19th century America.” In Sickness and Health in America, Pp. 257-272, 1978 edition.
Duffy, John. "The American medical profession and public health: From support to ambivalence." Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 1979 (53): 1-22.
Courtwright, David T. "Public health and public wealth: Social costs as a basis for restrictive policies." Milbank Quarterly, 1980 (58): 268-282.
Berliner, Howard S. "Whither public health?" Health Policy and Education, 1980 (1): 177-186.
Rosner, David. "Health care for the 'truly needy': 19th century origins of the concept." Milbank Quarterly 1982, (60): 355-385.
Duffy, John. "Social impact of disease in the late 19th century." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 414-421, 1985 edition.
Tomes, Nancy. "The private side of public health: Sanitary science, domestic hygiene, and the germ theory, 1870-1900." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1990 (64): 509-539.
Fee, Elizabeth; and Acheson, Roy M., eds. A History of Education in Public Health: Health that Mocks the Doctors' Rules. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991. pp. 15-43.
Fox, Daniel M. "Medical institutions and the state." in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. 1993. v. 2, pp. 1204-1230.
Humphreys, Margaret. “Kicking a dying dog: DDT and the demise of malaria in the American South, 1942-1950.” ISIS 1996 (87): 1-17.
Parmet, Wendy E. “From slaughter-house to Lochner: The rise and fall of the constitutionalization of public health.” American Journal of Legal History 1996, (40): 476-505.
Leighow, Susan R. “Backrubs vs. Bach: Nursing and the entry-into-practice debate, 1946-1986.” Nursing History Review 1996 (4): 3-17.
Hansen, Bert. “The image and advocacy of public health in American caricatures and cartoons.” American Journal of Public Health, 1997 (87): 1798-1807.
Fairman, Julie. “Alternative visions: The nurse-technology relationships in the context of the history of technology.” In Nursing History Review 1998 (6): 129-146.
Winslow, C. E. “Public health at the crossroads.” American Journal of Public Health 1999, (89): 1645-1648.
Warren, B. S.; Sydenstricker, Edgar. “The relation of wages to the public health.” American Journal of Public Health 1999(89): 1641-1644.
Hine, Darlene C. “’They shall mount up with wings as eagles’: Historical images of Black nurses, 1890-1950.” In Women and Health in America: Historical Readings. 2nd ed. Judith W. Leavitt, ed. 1999. Pp. 475-488.
Cirillo, Vincent J. “Fever and reform: The typhoid epidemic in the Spanish-American War.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2000 (55): 363-397.

Available as PDF file.


Markel, Howard. “For the welfare of children: The origins of the relationship between US public health workers and pediatricians.” American Journal of Public Health 2000(90): 893-899.
Grando, Victoria T. “A hard day’s work: Institutional nursing in the Post-World War II era.” Nursing History Review 2000 (8): 169-184.

Markowitz, Gerald; and Rosner, David. ““Cater to the children”: The role of the lead industry in a public health tragedy, 1900–1955.” American Journal of Public Health 2000 (90): 36-46.


Hamilton, Alice. “The Health of Immigrants.” American Journal of Public Health 2001 (91): 1765-1767.
Knowlton, Kim. “Urban History, Urban Health.” American Journal of Public Health 2001 (91): 1944-1946.
Gostin, Lawrence O. “Public Health Law Reform.” .” American Journal of Public Health, 2001 (91): 1365-136
Melosi, Martin V. Effluent America: Cities, Industry, Energy, and the Environment. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001. Pp. 49-67.
Casner, Nicholas. ““Do it now!” Yakima, Wash, and the campaign against rural typhoid.” American Journal of Public Health 2001 (91): 1768-1775.
Fee, Elizabeth, and Brown, Theodore M. “Preemptive Biopreparedness: Can We Learn Anything From History?” . American Journal of Public Health, 2001 (91): 721-726.
Callahan, Daniel; and Jennings, Bruce. “Ethics and Public Health: Forging a Strong Relationship.” American Journal of Public Health, 2002 (92): 169-176.
Wald, Priscilla; et. al. “Introduction: Contagion and culture.” American Literary History, 2002, 14(4): 653-685.
Tomes, Nancy. “Epidemic entertainments: Disease and popular culture in early-twentieth-century America.” American Literary History, 2002, 14(4): 625-652.
Humphreys, Margaret. “No safe place: Disease and panic in American history.” American Literary History, 2002, 14(4): 845-857.
Pernick, Martin S. “Contagion and culture.” American Literary History, 2002, 14(4): 858-865.
Blum, Edward J. “The Crucible of Disease: Trauma, Memory, and National Reconciliation during the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1878.” Journal of Southern History 2003 (64): 791-820.
Garb, Margaret. “Health, Morality, and Housing: The “Tenement Problem” in Chicago.” American Journal of Public Health 2003 (93): 1420-1430.:
Fedunkiw, Marianne. “Malaria Films: Motion Pictures as a Public Health Tool.” .” American Journal of Public Health 2003 (93): 1046-1057.
Wolf, Jacqueline. “Low Breastfeeding Rates and Public Health in the United States,” American Journal of Public Health, 2003 (93): 2000-2010.
Abel, Emily K. ““Only the best class of immigration”: Public health policy toward Mexicans and Filipinos in Los Angeles, 1910–1940.” American Journal of Public Health 2004 (94): 932-939.
Condran, Gretchen A.; and Lentzner, Harold A. “Early death: Morality among young children in New York, Chicago, and New Orleans.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2004, 34(3): 315-354.
Colgrove, James. “Between Persuasion and Compulsion: Smallpox Control in Brooklyn and New York, 1894-1902.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2004 (78): 349-378.
Fairchild, Amy L. “Policies of inclusion: Immigrants, disease, dependency, and American immigration policy at the dawn and dusk of the 20th century.” American Journal of Public Health 2004 (94): 528-539,
Rinaldo, Charles R., Jr. “Passive Immunization Against Poliomyelitis: The Hammon Gamma Globulin Field Trials, 1951–1953.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 790-799.
Podolsky, Scott H. “ The changing fate of pneumonia: as a public health concern in 20th-century America and beyond.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 2144-2154.
Colgrove, James; and Bayer, Ronald. “The Legacy of Jacobson v Massachusetts: Manifold Restraints: Liberty, Public Health, and the Legacy of Jacobson v Massachusetts.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 571-576.
Oppenheimer, Gerald M. “Becoming the Framingham Study 1947-1950.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 602-610.
Jones, David S. “The persistence of American Indian health disparities.” American Journal of Public Health 2006 (96): 2122-2134.

Espinoso, Mariola. “The Threat from Havana: Southern Public Health, Yellow Fever, and the U.S. Intervention in the Cuban Struggle for Independence, 1878-1898.” Journal of Southern History 2006 (72): 541-568.


Jones, Marian M.; and Bayer, Ronald. “Paternalism and its discontents: Motorcycle helmet laws, libertarian

values, and public health.” American Journal of Public Health 2007 (97): 208-217.


Singh, Gopal K.; and Kogan, Michael D. “Widening Socioeconomic Disparities in US Childhood Mortality, 1969–2000.” American Journal of Public Health 2007 (97): 1658-1665.
Rabin, Richard. “The lead industry and lead water pipes “A modest campaign”.” American Journal of Public Health 2008 (98): 1584-1592.
Baker, Jeffrey P. “Mercury, vaccines, and autism: One controversy, three histories.” American Journal of Public Health 2008 (98): 244-253.

Fuqua, Joy V. “The nurse-saver and the TV hostess: Advertising hospital television, 1950-1970.” In Cultural Sutures: Medicine and Media, pp. 74-92.


Lopez, Russ P. “Public health, the APHA, and urban renewal.” American Journal of Public Health 2009, (99): 1603-1611.
Hamlin, Christopher. “”Cholera forcing”: The myth of the good epidemic and the coming of good water.” American Journal of Public Health 2009 (99): 1946-1954.
Hampton, Lee. “Albert Sabin and the coalition to eliminate polio from the Americas.” American Journal of Public Health 2009 (99): 34-44.
Homer, Jenny; and French, Michael. “Motorcycle helmet laws in the United States from 1990 to 2005: Politics and public health.” American Journal of Public Health 2009 (99): 415-423.
Fairchild, Amy L.; Rosner, David; Colgrove, James; Bayer, Ronald; and Rried, Linda P. “The EXODUS of public health what history can tell us about the future.” American Journal of Public Health 2010 (100): 54-63.
Geronimus, Arline T. “Excess Black mortality in the United States and in selected Black and White high-poverty areas, 1980–2000.” American Journal of Public Health 2011 (101): 720-729.
Molina, Natalia. “Borders, laborers, and racialized medicalization: Mexican immigration and US public health practices in the 20th century.” American Journal of Public Health 2011 (101): 1024-1031.



Download 0.81 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   ...   27




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page