“A literary centennial of medical interest.” Reprinted from 1910, JAMA, 2010, 304(24): 2752.
“Preventing tuberculosis at its fountainhead.” Reprinted from February 4, 1910 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 305(5): 514.
Brown, Lawrason. “Concerning sanatorium and dispensary treatment of tuberculosis.” JAMA, 1911, 57(10): 837-838.
“Employment for cured tuberculosis patients.” Reprinted from February 11, 1911 issue of JAMA., JAMA, 2011, 304(6): 626. Armstrong, D. B. “The Framingham health and tuberculosis demonstration.” JAMA, 1917, 13: 1051-1056.
Goldberg, Benjamin. “Tuberculosis in racial types with special reference to Mexicans.” Excerpted from: Benjamin Goldberg, “Tuberculosis in racial types with special reference to Mexicans,” American Journal of Public Health, 1929, 19(3): 274–84. American Journal of Public Health, 2011, 101(7): 1209-1210.
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Szreter, Simon. “The importance of social intervention in Britain’s mortality decline c. 1850-1914: A re-interpretation of the role of public health.” Social History of Medicine, 1988, 1(1): 1-37.
Johnston, William. “A genealogy of tubercular diseases in Japan.’ Social History of Medicine, 1994, 7(2): 247-267
Robbins, J. M. “Class struggles in the tubercular world: nurses, patients, and physicians, 1903-1915.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1997 (71): 412-434.
Abel, E. K. “Taking the cure to the poor: patients’ responses to New York City’s tuberculosis program, 1894-1918.” American Journal of Public Health 1997 (87): 1808-1815.
Reber, Vera Blinn. “Blood, coughs and fever: Tuberculosis and the working class of Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1885-1915.” Social History of Medicine, 1999, 12(1): 73-100.
Lawlor, Clark; and Suzuki, Akihito. “The disease of the self: Representing consumption, 1700-1830.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2000 (74): 458-494.
Worboys, Michael. “From heredity to infection: Tuberculosis, 1870-1890.” In Heredity and Infection: The History of Disease Transmission. 2001. Pp. 81-100.
Condrau, Flurin. “”Who is the captain of all these men of death?”: The social structure of a tuberculosis sanitarium in postwar Germany.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2001, 32(2): 243-262.
Welshman, John. “Compulsion, localism, and pragmatism: The micro-politics of tuberculosis screening in the United Kingdom, 1950–1965.” Social History of Medicine 2006 (19): 295-312.
McMillen, Christian W. ““The Red Man and the White Plague”: Rethinking race, tuberculosis, and American Indians, ca. 1890–1950.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2008 (82): 608-645.
Schevitz, Jules. “Advertising as a force in public health education.” American Journal of Public Health 2010 (100): 1202-1204.
Brewer, Isaac W. “City life in relation to tuberculosis: A plea for better surroundings for factories and better homes for the working classes.” American Journal of Public Health 2010 (100): 420-422.
Balcazar, Hector; and Castro, Felipe G. “Tuberculosis in Mexicans: Learning from the past to provide lessons for the present.” American Journal of Public Health, 2011, 101(7):
Crespo, Fabian. “Tuberculosis and leprosy: Competing maladies or cross immunity?” Evolutionary Anthropology, March 27, 2013.
Abrams, Jeanne E. “’Spitting is dangerous, indecent, and against the law!’ Legislating health behavior during the American tuberculosis campaign.” Journal of the History of Medicine, 2013, 68(3): 416-450.
November 20 Wednesday
History of Tuberculosis in the 20th Century-PBS videotape-Pt. 2
Armstrong, D. B. “Civilian tuberculosis control following the war.” American Journal of Public Health 1918 (December): 897-903.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Fox, Daniel M. “Social policy and city politics: tuberculosis reporting in New York, 1889-1990.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1975(49): 169-195.
Bates, J. H., et.al. “The history of tuberculosis as a global epidemic.” Medical Clinics of North America 1993 (77:6): 1205-1217.
Lerner, Barron. “New York City’s tuberculosis control efforts: the historical limitations of the war on consumption.” American Journal of Public Health 1993 (83): 758-766.
Sepkowitz, K. a. “Tuberculosis and the health care worker: a historical perspective.” Annals of Internal Medicine 1994 (120): 71-79.
McBride, David. “Tuberculosis in African-American and minority populations: historical epidemiology of a nonclassic contagious process.” Journal of the Association of Academic Minority Physicians 1994 (5): 11-15.
Frieden, Thomas R.; et.al. “A multi-institutional outbreak of highly drug-resistant tuberculosis: Epidemiology and clinical outcomes.” JAMA, 1996, 276(15): 1228-1235.
Lerner, Barron. “From careless consumptives to recalcitrant patients: the historical construction of noncompliance.” Social Science and Medicine 1997 (45): 1423-1431.
Oscherwitz, Tom. “Detention of persistently nonadherent patients with tuberculosis.” JAMA, 1997, 278(10): 843-846.
Abel, Emily K. “Taking the cure to the poor: patients’ responses to New York City’s tuberculosis program, 1894-1918.” American Journal of Public Health 1997(87): 1808-1815.
Fairchild, Amy L. “Public health nihilism vs pragmatism: History, politics, and the control of tuberculosis.” American Journal of Public Health 1998 (88): 1105-1117.
Phillips, Jim; and French, Michael. “State regulations and the hazards of milk, 1900-1939.” Social History of Medicine, 1999, 12(3): 371-388.
Prescott, Health M. “The White Plague goes to college: Tuberculosis prevention programs in colleges and universities, 1920-1960.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2000 (74): 735-772.
Share with your friends: |