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3.
In. Teja Pérez, Julio; Más Bermejo, Pedro; Vidal Ledo, María Josefina; Castro Miranda, Osvaldo Juan. La práctica de la salud pública en Cuba (1980-1995). La Habana, Editorial Ciencias Médicas, 2021. .
Monography in Spanish | CUMED | ID: cum-77811
4.
In. Teja Pérez, Julio; Más Bermejo, Pedro; Vidal Ledo, María Josefina; Castro Miranda, Osvaldo Juan. La práctica de la salud pública en Cuba (1980-1995). La Habana, Editorial Ciencias Médicas, 2021. , tab.
Monography in Spanish | CUMED | ID: cum-77809
5.
In. Teja Pérez, Julio; Más Bermejo, Pedro; Vidal Ledo, María Josefina; Castro Miranda, Osvaldo Juan. La práctica de la salud pública en Cuba (1980-1995). La Habana, Editorial Ciencias Médicas, 2021. .
Monography in Spanish | CUMED | ID: cum-77808
7.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 49-69, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997057

ABSTRACT

Peru's first cancer control public outreach scheme started in the 1910s, but ground to a standstill as it attained official governmental recognition in 1926 as the Liga Anti-Cancerosa (LAC). This paper explains the developments leading to that earliest effort to enlist a coalition of State health agencies, physicians, and lay people in a campaign to publicize early signs of this disease, as well as the medical and political reasons for and implications of its decline. Besides highlighting the importance of professional initiatives shaping cancer activism, contextualizing the rise and fall of the LAC calls attention to the effects that hospitalization of cancer treatment had on aspects of cancer care that were not directly treatment-related, such as public outreach.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms/history , Public Health Practice/history , Voluntary Health Agencies/history , Community-Institutional Relations , Developing Countries , Health Promotion/history , History, 20th Century , Hospitalization , Humans , Neoplasms/mortality , Neoplasms/prevention & control , Neoplasms/therapy , Peru/epidemiology
8.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 13-28, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997055

ABSTRACT

The subdiscipline of historical epidemiology holds the promise of creating a more robust and more nuanced foundation for global public health decision-making by deepening the empirical record from which we draw lessons about past interventions. This essay draws upon historical epidemiological research on three global public health campaigns to illustrate this promise: the Rockefeller Foundation's efforts to control hookworm disease (1909-c.1930), the World Health Organization's pilot projects for malaria eradication in tropical Africa (1950s-1960s), and the international efforts to shut down the transmission of Ebola virus disease during outbreaks in tropical Africa (1974-2019).


Subject(s)
Epidemiology/history , Global Health/history , Health Promotion/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/history , Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , Africa , Communicable Disease Control/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/transmission , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Malaria/prevention & control , Public Health Practice/history , World Health Organization/history
9.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 29-48, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997056

ABSTRACT

According to David Fidler, the governance of infectious diseases evolved from the mid-nineteenth to the twenty-first century as a series of institutional arrangements: the International Sanitary Regulations (non-interference and disease control at borders), the World Health Organization vertical programs (malaria and smallpox eradication campaigns), and a post-Westphalian regime standing beyond state-centrism and national interest. But can international public health be reduced to such a Westphalian image? We scrutinize three strategies that brought health borders into prominence: pre-empting weak states (eastern Mediterranean in the nineteenth century); preventing the spread of disease through nation-building (Macedonian public health system in the 1920s); and debordering the fight against epidemics (1920-1921 Russian-Polish war and the Warsaw 1922 Sanitary Conference).


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/history , Public Health Practice/history , Asia , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Europe , Global Health/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hospitals, Isolation/history , Malaria/history , Malaria/prevention & control , Politics , Quarantine/history , World Health Organization/history
10.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 165-185, 2020 09.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997062

ABSTRACT

Global health is a multifaceted concept that entails the standardization of procedures in healthcare domains in accordance with a doctrine agreed upon by experts. This essay focus on the creation of health demonstration areas by the World Health Organisation (WHO) to establish core nodes for integrated state-of-the-art health services. It explores the origins, theoretical basis and aims of this technique and reviews several European experiences during the first 20 years of the WHO. Particular attention is paid to the historical importance of technical cooperative activities carried out by the WHO in regard to the implementation of health services, a long-term strategic move that contributed to the thematic upsurge of primary health care in the late 1970s.


Subject(s)
Global Health/history , Public Health Practice/history , Education/history , Europe , Health Services/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , World Health Organization/history
11.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 187-210, 2020 Sep.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997063

ABSTRACT

Within the framework of recent historiography about the role of the World Health Organization (WHO) in modernizing public health and the multifaceted concept of global health, this study addresses the impact of the WHO's "country programs" in Spain from the time it was admitted to this organization in 1951 to 1975. This research adopts a transnational historical perspective and emphasizes attention to the circulation of health knowledge, practices, and people, and focuses on the Spain-0001 and Spain-0025programs, their role in the development of virology in Spain, and the transformation of public health. Sources include historical archives (WHO, the Spanish National Health School), various WHO publications, the contemporary medical press, and a selection of the Spanish general press.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research/history , Public Health Practice/history , Virology/history , World Health Organization/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Spain
12.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 211-230, 2020 Sep.
Article in English, Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997064

ABSTRACT

Economic development and good health depended on access to clean water and sanitation. Therefore, because economic development and good health depended on access to clean water and sanitation, beginning in the early 1970s the World Bank, the World Health Organization (WHO), and others began a period of sustained interest in developing both for the billions without either. During the 1980s, two massive and wildly ambitious projects showed what was possible. The International Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation Decade and the Blue Nile Health Project aimed for nothing less than the total overhaul of the way water was developed. This was, according to the WHO, "development in the spirit of social justice."


Subject(s)
Global Health/history , Public Health Practice/history , Sanitation/history , Water Supply/history , Africa , History, 20th Century , Humans , United Nations/history , World Health Organization/history
13.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 211-230, Sept. 2020.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134086

ABSTRACT

Abstract Economic development and good health depended on access to clean water and sanitation. Therefore, because economic development and good health depended on access to clean water and sanitation, beginning in the early 1970s the World Bank, the World Health Organization (WHO), and others began a period of sustained interest in developing both for the billions without either. During the 1980s, two massive and wildly ambitious projects showed what was possible. The International Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation Decade and the Blue Nile Health Project aimed for nothing less than the total overhaul of the way water was developed. This was, according to the WHO, "development in the spirit of social justice."


Resumo Crescimento econômico e boa saúde dependem de acesso a saneamento e água limpa. Assim, o Banco Mundial, a Organização Mundial da Saúde (OMS) e outros órgãos, a partir do início da década de 1970, inauguraram um período de contínuo interesse no desenvolvimento de ambos para bilhões de pessoas desprovidas de tais necessidades. Durante a década de 1980, dois projetos monumentais e extremamente ambiciosos demonstraram o que era viável fazer. A International Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation Decade e o Blue Nile Health Project visavam à total reestruturação do modelo de desenvolvimento da água. Tratava-se, segundo a OMS, do "desenvolvimento do espírito de justiça social".


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 20th Century , Water Supply/history , Public Health Practice/history , Sanitation/history , Global Health/history , United Nations/history , World Health Organization/history , Africa
14.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 165-185, Sept. 2020.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134087

ABSTRACT

Abstract Global health is a multifaceted concept that entails the standardization of procedures in healthcare domains in accordance with a doctrine agreed upon by experts. This essay focus on the creation of health demonstration areas by the World Health Organisation (WHO) to establish core nodes for integrated state-of-the-art health services. It explores the origins, theoretical basis and aims of this technique and reviews several European experiences during the first 20 years of the WHO. Particular attention is paid to the historical importance of technical cooperative activities carried out by the WHO in regard to the implementation of health services, a long-term strategic move that contributed to the thematic upsurge of primary health care in the late 1970s.


Resumen Salud global es un concepto complejo que implica la normalización de los procedimientos de actuación sanitaria siguiendo una doctrina acordada por expertos. Este trabajo se ocupa del establecimiento de zonas de demostración sanitaria por la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) a modo de núcleos de modernos servicios sanitarios integrados. Revisa el origen, las bases téoricas y los objetivos de esta técnica y examina diversas experiencias europeas durante los primeros veinte años de la OMS. Pone de manifiesto la importancia histórica de las actividades de cooperación técnica de la OMS en la puesta en marcha de servicios sanitarios, una estrategia de largo plazo que ayuda a entender la aparición de la atención primaria de salud a finales de la década de 1970.


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 20th Century , Public Health Practice/history , Global Health/history , World Health Organization/history , Education/history , Europe , Health Services/history
15.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 49-69, Sept. 2020. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134092

ABSTRACT

Abstract Peru's first cancer control public outreach scheme started in the 1910s, but ground to a standstill as it attained official governmental recognition in 1926 as the Liga Anti-Cancerosa (LAC). This paper explains the developments leading to that earliest effort to enlist a coalition of State health agencies, physicians, and lay people in a campaign to publicize early signs of this disease, as well as the medical and political reasons for and implications of its decline. Besides highlighting the importance of professional initiatives shaping cancer activism, contextualizing the rise and fall of the LAC calls attention to the effects that hospitalization of cancer treatment had on aspects of cancer care that were not directly treatment-related, such as public outreach.


Resumo O primeiro programa peruano de sensibilização pública para controle do câncer iniciou na década de 1910, mas arrefeceu quando reconhecido pelo governo como Liga Anticancerosa (LAC), em 1926. Este artigo aborda os avanços que conduziram aos pioneiros esforços de recrutamento de agências governamentais de saúde, médicos e leigos na divulgação sobre os primeiros sinais da doença, assim como as motivações políticas e médicas e as implicações de seu declínio. Além de assinalar a importância de iniciativas profissionais no ativismo na temática do câncer, a contextualização da ascensão e declínio da LAC chama a atenção para os reflexos da hospitalização no tratamento do câncer sobre aspectos indiretamente relacionados ao tratamento, como os esforços de sensibilização pública.


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 20th Century , Voluntary Health Agencies/history , Public Health Practice/history , Neoplasms/history , Peru/epidemiology , Community-Institutional Relations , Developing Countries , Health Promotion/history , Hospitalization , Neoplasms/mortality , Neoplasms/prevention & control , Neoplasms/therapy
16.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 187-210, Sept. 2020.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134096

ABSTRACT

Abstract Within the framework of recent historiography about the role of the World Health Organization (WHO) in modernizing public health and the multifaceted concept of global health, this study addresses the impact of the WHO's "country programs" in Spain from the time it was admitted to this organization in 1951 to 1975. This research adopts a transnational historical perspective and emphasizes attention to the circulation of health knowledge, practices, and people, and focuses on the Spain-0001 and Spain-0025programs, their role in the development of virology in Spain, and the transformation of public health. Sources include historical archives (WHO, the Spanish National Health School), various WHO publications, the contemporary medical press, and a selection of the Spanish general press.


Resumen En el marco de la reciente historiografía sobre el papel de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) en la modernización de la salud pública y el concepto multifacético de salud global, se estudia el papel de los llamados "programas país" de la OMS en España desde su admisión en 1951 hasta 1975. Adoptando perspectiva histórica transnacional y enfatizando el estudio de la circulación de personas, conocimientos y prácticas científico-sanitarias, nuestro análisis se centra en los programas España-0001 y España-0025, en evaluar su papel en el desarrollo de la virología en España y en la transformación de la salud pública. Nuestras fuentes vienen de archivos históricos (OMS, Escuela Nacional de Sanidad), publicaciones de la OMS, revistas médicas contemporáneas, y una selección de prensa general española.


Subject(s)
Humans , Spain , Virology , World Health Organization/history , Biomedical Research , Public Health Practice/history
17.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 29-48, Sept. 2020.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134097

ABSTRACT

Abstract According to David Fidler, the governance of infectious diseases evolved from the mid-nineteenth to the twenty-first century as a series of institutional arrangements: the International Sanitary Regulations (non-interference and disease control at borders), the World Health Organization vertical programs (malaria and smallpox eradication campaigns), and a post-Westphalian regime standing beyond state-centrism and national interest. But can international public health be reduced to such a Westphalian image? We scrutinize three strategies that brought health borders into prominence: pre-empting weak states (eastern Mediterranean in the nineteenth century); preventing the spread of disease through nation-building (Macedonian public health system in the 1920s); and debordering the fight against epidemics (1920-1921 Russian-Polish war and the Warsaw 1922 Sanitary Conference).


Resumo Segundo David Fidler, a gestão de doenças infecciosas entre meados do século XIX e e o XXI guiou-se por uma série de acordos institucionais: Regulamento Sanitário Internacional (não interferência e controle de doenças em fronteiras), programas verticais da OMS (campanhas de erradicação da malária e varíola), e posicionamento pós-vestefaliano além do estado-centrismo e interesse nacional. Mas pode a saúde pública internacional ser reduzida à tal imagem vestefaliana? Examinamos três estratégias que destacaram as fronteiras sanitárias: prevenção em estados vulneráveis (Mediterrâneo oriental, século XIX); prevenção à disseminação de doenças via construção nacional (sistema público de saúde macedônico, anos 1920); remoção de fronteiras no combate às epidemias (guerra polaco-soviética, 1920-1921 e Conferência Sanitária de Varsóvia, 1922).


Subject(s)
History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Public Health Practice/history , Communicable Disease Control/history , Politics , Asia , World Health Organization/history , Quarantine/history , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Global Health/history , Europe , Hospitals, Isolation/history , Malaria/history , Malaria/prevention & control
18.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 13-28, Sept. 2020.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134098

ABSTRACT

Abstract The subdiscipline of historical epidemiology holds the promise of creating a more robust and more nuanced foundation for global public health decision-making by deepening the empirical record from which we draw lessons about past interventions. This essay draws upon historical epidemiological research on three global public health campaigns to illustrate this promise: the Rockefeller Foundation's efforts to control hookworm disease (1909-c.1930), the World Health Organization's pilot projects for malaria eradication in tropical Africa (1950s-1960s), and the international efforts to shut down the transmission of Ebola virus disease during outbreaks in tropical Africa (1974-2019).


Resumo A subdisciplina epidemiologia histórica se propõe a criar um alicerce robusto e refinado para o processo de tomada de decisões em saúde pública global, aprofundando registros empíricos que nos ensinam sobre intervenções passadas. Este artigo se baseia na pesquisa epidemiológica histórica de três campanhas globais de saúde pública para ilustrar essa proposta: os esforços da Fundação Rockefeller para controle da ancilostomose (1909-c.1930), os projetos-piloto da Organização Mundial da Saúde para erradicação da malária na África tropical (décadas de 1950-1960), e os esforços internacionais de interrupção da transmissão do vírus Ebola durante surtos na África tropical (1974-2019).


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 20th Century , Global Health/history , Epidemiology/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/history , Health Promotion/history , Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , World Health Organization/history , Public Health Practice/history , Communicable Disease Control/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/transmission , Africa , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Malaria/prevention & control
19.
Bull World Health Organ ; 98(7): 447-448, 2020 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32742029

ABSTRACT

Sabina Faiz Rashid talks to Andréia Azevedo Soares about anthropology, poverty, inequality and sex education in Bangladesh.


Subject(s)
Public Health Practice , Reproductive Health , Bangladesh , COVID-19/prevention & control , Family Planning Services/history , Female , History, 21st Century , Human Rights , Humans , Male , Public Health Practice/history , Research , Resilience, Psychological
20.
Med Hist ; 64(1): 1-31, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31933500

ABSTRACT

At the end of the nineteenth century, the northern port of Liverpool had become the second largest in the United Kingdom. Fast transatlantic steamers to Boston and other American ports exploited this route, increasing the risk of maritime disease epidemics. The 1901-3 epidemic in Liverpool was the last serious smallpox outbreak in Liverpool and was probably seeded from these maritime contacts, which introduced a milder form of the disease that was more difficult to trace because of its long incubation period and occurrence of undiagnosed cases. The characteristics of these epidemics in Boston and Liverpool are described and compared with outbreaks in New York, Glasgow and London between 1900 and 1903. Public health control strategies, notably medical inspection, quarantine and vaccination, differed between the two countries and in both settings were inconsistently applied, often for commercial reasons or due to public unpopularity. As a result, smaller smallpox epidemics spread out from Liverpool until 1905. This paper analyses factors that contributed to this last serious epidemic using the historical epidemiological data available at that time. Though imperfect, these early public health strategies paved the way for better prevention of imported maritime diseases.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/methods , Epidemics/history , Hospitals, Isolation/history , Quarantine/history , Smallpox/history , Commerce/history , Communicable Disease Control/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Mass Screening/history , Public Health Practice/history , Ships/history , Smallpox/epidemiology , Smallpox Vaccine/history , Travel/history , United Kingdom , United States , Vaccination/history
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