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2.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 38(1): 93-127, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33836136

ABSTRACT

After the Second World War, health prevention work in Canada shifted from a focus on sanitation and hygiene to illness prevention and health promotion. Canada became a significant global leader, beginning with the Lalonde Report of 1974. Yet less is known about the provincial public health associations and how their work differed from that of the national body. The purpose of this article is to examine the Saskatchewan Public Health Association's (SPHA) policy work from 1954 to 1986. Utilizing meeting minutes and newsletters, we found that while both national and provincial associations made efforts to prevent accidents, reduce tobacco use, and fluoridate water, the SPHA tended to advocate more for child health, and the cautious use of nuclear power. At the same time, the SPHA's resolutions tended to ignore emerging factors shaping health, including the social determinants of health, regional inequities, lack of public trust in experts, misinformation, and human psychology. Examining the SPHA's records revealed that region mattered in preventative policy work.


Subject(s)
Health Policy/history , Preventive Health Services/history , Public Health/history , Societies, Medical/history , History, 20th Century , Saskatchewan
4.
Int J Med Microbiol ; 310(5): 151434, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32654772

ABSTRACT

The year 2019 marked the 140th anniversary of the inauguration of the first Institute of Hygiene, which was established for Max von Pettenkofer at the university of Munich. After Pettenkofer, his successors tried to advance the science of hygiene each in their own specific way, highlighting different aspects and trying to relate them to Pettenkofer's legacy: Max von Gruber promoted an understanding of hygiene which was more and more tied to constitutional and racial factors, Karl Kisskalt tried to revise a perceived bacteriological paradigm, and Hermann Eyer focused on preventive public health measures. All of those influences had a more or less explicit and distinct connection to the general development of German medicine in the first half of the 20th century and its culmination in National Socialist crimes. The history of Munich's Institute of Hygiene after Pettenkofer illustrates the differing scientific and ideological paths this development pursued by the examples of its three long-term protagonists and their relationship to National Socialism.


Subject(s)
Bacteriology/history , Hygiene/history , National Socialism/history , Preventive Health Services/history , Racism/history , Epidemiology , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans
5.
Isr J Health Policy Res ; 8(1): 23, 2019 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30732652

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Pediatric preventive health services are delivered in many different formats throughout the world. In Israel, these services for young children are provided in designated Maternal Child Health Clinics (MCHC). The history and operation of Israel's MCHC have been described primarily in the Hebrew language medical literature with most of these reports being over a decade old. This paper provides an up to date summary of the evolution and current care in Israel's one-hundred-year old model for the provision of preschool preventive health services. As these clinics have been recognized by the World Organization as a model for emulation, it is important that such information be made available. Israel's MCHC provide universal care to infants and preschool children (0-6 years), free of charge. These community-based clinics provide developmental surveillance, growth monitoring, and routine childhood immunizations. Anticipatory guidance is offered to families on topics including nutrition, parenting and child safety. Screening is also performed for maternal postpartum depression and family violence. Care is given by public health nurses working in collaboration with physicians. The vast majority (> 96%) of the country's children receive care in this system. Immunization coverage rates through this system are in line with World Health Organization guidelines - over 95% overall average nationally. Unfortunately, the allocated funding has not increased in proportion to the population growth. There is ongoing debate on the role of the national government in health services: should it be that of a direct services provider or focus on guidance and regulation of the health system. CONCLUSION: MCHC well child care can help assure widespread provision of pediatric preventive health care. For this model to function, both its funding and content needs to be updated on an ongoing basis to reflect current preventive health care needs.


Subject(s)
Pediatrics/history , Preventive Health Services/history , Adolescent , Child , Child Welfare/history , Child Welfare/trends , Child, Preschool , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Israel , Male , Pediatrics/trends , Preventive Health Services/methods
6.
Rocz Panstw Zakl Hig ; 70(4): 423-429, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31961106

ABSTRACT

The article presents the history of the establishment of the State School of Hygiene (PSH) in Poland after the First World War. The difficulties faced by the public health service in a country destroyed by war and created after the reunification of the lands, which for over 150 years remained under the control of three powers, were pointed out. It discusses how the foundations of modern teaching in the field of public health were created in the National Institute of Hygiene (PZH) in Warsaw, an institution to which the Ministry of Public Health entrusted tasks related to health education in the country. The State School of Hygiene was built by the Polish Government with a significant financial contribution from the John Davison Rockefeller Foundation. The official opening ceremony took place on 20 April 1926. The State School of Hygiene in Warsaw was the first such school in Europe. It educated professional staff for the health service in Poland, especially sanitary physicians, sanitary inspectors, nurses and staff to work in health offices. The importance and scope of influence of the State School of Hygiene as the Department of Education in the National Institute of Hygiene was constantly increasing, as evidenced by the number of students (about 800 per year) participating in courses, especially in the first years after its establishment. By the end of 1935, 6,389 students had completed the courses, including 1,900 physicians. Apart from the teaching activities, the State School of Hygiene also carried out research work. The State School of Hygiene was supported by the Rockefeller Foundation, which funded scholarships for the employees of the National Institute of Hygiene at university centers in the USA


Subject(s)
Government Agencies/history , Hygiene/history , Public Health/history , School Health Services/history , Academies and Institutes/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , National Health Programs/history , Poland , Preventive Health Services/history , Schools
8.
Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen ; 138(17)2018 10 30.
Article in English, Norwegian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30378403

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The interwar period was a time of comprehensive preventive health programmes in Norway. Physical exercise, nutritious diets, strict sleep regimens and better hygiene were at the centre of these efforts. A massive mobilisation of volunteers and professionals took place. The publication of House Maxims for Mothers and Children was part of this large-scale mobilisation, and consisted of ten posters with pithy health advice for hanging on the wall. Mothers were an important target group for health promotion. MATERIAL AND METHOD: The posters have previously received little attention in medical literature, but they can elucidate some features of life and the health propaganda of their time. We have used databases that provide access to newspapers, books and medical literature: Retriever, bokhylla.no, Oria, PubMed and Web of Science. RESULTS: It is hard to quantify the effect of this popular movement when compared to political measures to improve living conditions. In any case, mortality rates fell, life expectancy increased and the dreaded communicable diseases were largely defeated. Special efforts were targeted at children, also with good results. Infant mortality fell and schoolchildren became healthier, stronger, taller and cleaner. INTERPRETATION: The line between social hygiene and general disciplining is blurred, for example the boundary between a healthy diet and bourgeois norms. The education of mothers and children also included a normative aspect that concerned good manners and control.


Subject(s)
Consumer Health Information/history , Health Education/history , Health Promotion/history , Posters as Topic , Child , Child Health/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Hygiene/history , Mothers/education , Mothers/history , Norway , Preventive Health Services/history , Public Health/history
9.
Rev. Hosp. Ital. B. Aires (2004) ; 38(2): 70-77, jun. 2018. ilus., tab.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-1023102

ABSTRACT

A través de la revisión de documentos históricos y otras fuentes bibliográficas, y desde la perspectiva de la enfermería, se describen los recursos y prácticas sanitarias con que contaba el equipo de salud que acompañó al cuerpo del Ejército de los Andes al mando del general José de San Martín desde el inicio del cruce de los Andes el 19 de enero en las Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata, hasta finalizada la batalla de Chacabuco, en la Capitanía General de Chile, el 12 de febrero de 1817. Este trabajo nos permite conocer el trabajo de los primeros sanitarios militares que asistieron en el cuidado de los soldados de los ejércitos patrios y contribuir así a difundir la historia de la Medicina Argentina. (AU)


Through the review of historical documents and other bibliographic sources, and from the perspective of nursing, we describe the health resources and practices held by the health team that accompanied the Army of Los Andes under the command of General José de San Martín, from the start of crossing Los Andes on January 19th in the Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata, to finish in the battle of Chacabuco, in the General Captaincy of Chile on February 12th, 1817. This work allows us to know the work of the first military health professionals who assisted in the care of the soldiers of the patriotic armies and contribute to spread the history of the Argentine Medicine. (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 19th Century , Preventive Health Services/history , Primary Nursing/history , Hospitals, Military/history , Military Nursing/history , Military Personnel/history , Argentina , Preventive Health Services/organization & administration , Preventive Health Services/supply & distribution , Chile , Clothing/statistics & numerical data , Andean Ecosystem/history , Holistic Nursing/history , History of Medicine , Latin America
12.
Zhonghua Yi Shi Za Zhi ; 47(2): 83-86, 2017 Mar 28.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28468109

ABSTRACT

Until 1922, full sovereignty was restored by the Peiyang Government. To 1929, the Health and Epidemic Prevention System was gradually established in Qingdao, and the Health Bureau was set up, issuing a variety of health and epidemic prevention regulations, laws, propagating health knowledge, and carrying out health campaign. This made a big step forward in the protection and promotion of public health. However, due to lack of funds, and frequent changes in the health administration, the effect of the System and the development of health services were affected.


Subject(s)
Preventive Health Services/history , Public Health Administration/history , Public Health Practice/history , China , Epidemics/history , Epidemics/prevention & control , Government Regulation/history , Health Promotion/history , History, 20th Century , Humans
14.
Acta Med Hist Adriat ; 15(2): 193-218, 2017 12.
Article in Croatian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29402113

ABSTRACT

What has been researched and reconstructed, based on archival documents and data from professional literature, is the activity of the State school-polyclinic in Petrinja, from its foundation in 1925 to its termination in 1945. Key figures taking part in its activity have also been highlighted. Founded as one of the first school-polyclinics in Croatia, the State school-polyclinic in Petrinja developed complete preventive and curative health activities aimed at school population in Petrinja as well as at pupils from the village schools in Petrinja County. These activities were based on carrying out thorough check-ups, giving school children vaccination, and taking other counter-epidemic measures, providing health and sanitary education, exercising sanitary supervision of schools and pupils' homes, implementing remedial measures in the field, taking extra care of socially handicapped children, providing regular diet and healthy meals for the poorest (who got prescription glasses for free, as well as medicines, fish-liver oil, who got their teeth filled, hair cut and were given the opportunity to recuperate in the youth holiday camps at the seaside and in the mountains.) The activities also encompassed the efficient treatment of the sick, among whom the various infectious and internist diseases (anaemia, undernourishment, struma, rickets) and dental caries were prevalent. Its twenty-year-old continuous activity aimed at providing school population with health care represents a successful synthesis of preventive and curative health principles based on progressive ideas of social medicine promoted by Andrija Stampar, who was a promoter and reformer of public health service in our regions. Due to being well-organized and the professional enthusiasm of its managers and staff, the State school-polyclinic in Petrinja efficiently promoted public hygiene and addressed the specific health needs of the school population. While promoting integral health care, maintaining and improving physical and mental health of children and youth in the schools in Petrinja and the other schools nearby, it raised the reputation of health care in Petrinja and contributed to the development of the Croatian school of medicine.


Subject(s)
Preventive Health Services/history , School Health Services/history , Child , Dental Care for Children/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Schools, Medical , Yugoslavia
19.
Med Hist ; 60(2): 250-69, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26971599

ABSTRACT

The Pioneer Health Centre, based in South London before and after the Second World War, remains a source of interest for advocates of a positive approach to health promotion in contrast with the treatment of those already ill. Its closure in 1950 for lack of funds has been blamed on the then recently established National Health Service, but this article argues that such an explanation is over-simplified and ignores a number of other factors. The Centre had struggled financially during the 1930s and tried to gain support from the Medical Research Council. The Council appeared interested in the Centre before the war, but was less sympathetic in the 1940s. Around the time of its closure and afterwards, the Centre was also involved in negotiations with London County Council; these failed because the Centre's directors would not accept the changes which the Council would have needed to make. Unpublished documents reveal that the Centre's directors were uncompromising and that their approach to the situation antagonised their colleagues. Changes in medical science also worked against the Centre. The success of sulphonamide drugs appeared to render preventive medicine less significant, while the development of statistical techniques cast doubt on the Centre's experimental methods. The Centre was at the heart of the nascent organic farming movement, which opposed the rapid growth of chemical cultivation. But what might be termed 'chemical triumphalism' was on the march in both medicine and agriculture, and the Centre was out of tune with the mood of the times.


Subject(s)
Community Health Centers/history , Preventive Health Services/history , Biomedical Research/history , Community Health Centers/organization & administration , Health Promotion/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , London , Preventive Health Services/organization & administration , State Medicine/history , United Kingdom
20.
Curr Probl Pediatr Adolesc Health Care ; 46(4): 101-25, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26872870

ABSTRACT

Responsibilities for primary care clinicians are rapidly expanding ascomplexities in families' lives create increased disparities in health and developmental outcomes for young children. Despite the demands on primary care clinicians to promote health in the context of complex family and community factors, most primary care clinicians are operating in an environment of limited training and a shortage of resources for supporting families. Partnerships with evidence-based home visiting programs for very young children and their families can provide a resource that will help to reduce the impact of adverse early childhood experiences and facilitate health equity. Home visiting programs in the United States are typically voluntary and designed to be preventative in nature, although families are usually offered services based on significant risk criteria since the costs associated with universal approaches have been considered prohibitive. Programs may be funded within the health (physical orbehavioral/mental health), child welfare, early education, or early intervention systems or by private foundation dollars focused primarily on oneof the above systems (e.g., health), with a wide range of outcomes targeted by the programs and funders. Services may be primarily focused on the child, the parent, or parent-child interactions. Services include the development of targeted and individualized intervention strategies, better coaching of parents, and improved modeling of interactions that may assist struggling families. This paper provides a broad overview ofthe history of home visiting, theoretical bases of home visiting programs, key components of evidence-based models, outcomes typically targeted, research on effectiveness, cost information, challenges and benefits of home visiting, and funding/sustainability concerns. Significance for primary care clinicians isdescribed specifically and information relevant for clinicians is emphasized throughout the paper.


Subject(s)
Child Health Services , Community Networks/organization & administration , Home Care Services , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/statistics & numerical data , Preventive Health Services , Primary Health Care , Adolescent , Child , Child Health Services/history , Child Health Services/organization & administration , Child Health Services/trends , Child, Preschool , Early Intervention, Educational , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Home Care Services/history , Home Care Services/organization & administration , Home Care Services/trends , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Parents , Pregnancy , Preventive Health Services/history , Preventive Health Services/organization & administration , Preventive Health Services/trends , Primary Health Care/history , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/trends , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Socioeconomic Factors , United States/epidemiology
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