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1.
Demography ; 55(2): 435-457, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29492799

ABSTRACT

In this study, we investigate the effect of early-life coresidence with paternal grandparents on male mortality risks in adulthood and older age in northeast China from 1789 to 1909. Despite growing interest in the influence of grandparents on child outcomes, few studies have examined the effect of coresidence with grandparents in early life on mortality in later life. We find that coresidence with paternal grandmothers in childhood is associated with higher mortality risks for males in adulthood. This may reflect the long-term effects of conflicts between mothers and their mothers-in-law. These results suggest that in extended families, patterns of coresidence in childhood may have long-term consequences for mortality, above and beyond the effects of common environmental and genetic factors, even when effects on childhood mortality are not readily apparent.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Intergenerational Relations/ethnology , Mortality/history , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Child, Preschool , China/epidemiology , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Logistic Models , Male , Men's Health , Middle Aged , Resource Allocation/history , Young Adult
2.
Geogr J ; 177(2): 160-70, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21922685

ABSTRACT

As demand and competition for water resources increase, the river basin has become the primary unit for water management and planning. While appealing in principle, practical implementation of river basin management and allocation has often been problematic. This paper examines the case of the Krishna basin in South India. It highlights that conflicts over basin water are embedded in a broad reality of planning and development where multiple scales of decisionmaking and non-water issues are at play. While this defines the river basin as a disputed "space of dependence", the river basin has yet to acquire a social reality. It is not yet a "space of engagement" in and for which multiple actors take actions. This explains the endurance of an interstate dispute over the sharing of the Krishna waters and sets limits to what can be achieved through further basin water allocation and adjudication mechanisms ­ tribunals ­ that are too narrowly defined. There is a need to extend the domain of negotiation from that of a single river basin to multiple scales and to non-water sectors. Institutional arrangements for basin management need to internalise the political spaces of the Indian polity: the states and the panchayats. This re-scaling process is more likely to shape the river basin as a space of engagement in which partial agreements can be iteratively renegotiated, and constitute a promising alternative to the current interstate stalemate.


Subject(s)
Politics , Public Health , Resource Allocation , Rivers , Water Supply , Decision Making , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , India/ethnology , Policy Making , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Resource Allocation/economics , Resource Allocation/education , Resource Allocation/history , Resource Allocation/legislation & jurisprudence , Waste Management/economics , Waste Management/history , Waste Management/legislation & jurisprudence , Water Supply/economics , Water Supply/history , Water Supply/legislation & jurisprudence
3.
Crit Care Clin ; 25(1): 221-37, x, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19268804

ABSTRACT

Because they provide potential benefit at great personal and public cost, the intensive care unit (ICU) and the interventions rendered therein have become symbols of both the promise and the limitations of medical technology. At the same time, the ICU has served as an arena in which many of the ethical and legal dilemmas created by that technology have been defined and debated. This article outlines major events in the history of ethics and law in the ICU, covering the evolution of ICUs, ethical principles, informed consent and the law, medical decision-making, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining therapy, legal cases involving life support, advance directives, prognostication, and futility and the allocation of medical resources. Advancement of the ethical principle of respect for patient autonomy in ICUs increasingly is in conflict with physicians' concern about their own prerogatives and with the just distribution of medical resources.


Subject(s)
Critical Care/ethics , Critical Care/history , Intensive Care Units/history , Intensive Care Units/legislation & jurisprudence , Advance Directives/history , Advance Directives/legislation & jurisprudence , Bioethics/history , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation/ethics , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation/history , Critical Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Informed Consent/history , Informed Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Intensive Care Units/ethics , Life Support Care/ethics , Life Support Care/history , Life Support Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Medical Futility/ethics , Medical Futility/legislation & jurisprudence , Resource Allocation/ethics , Resource Allocation/history , Resource Allocation/legislation & jurisprudence , Terminal Care/ethics , Terminal Care/history , Terminal Care/legislation & jurisprudence , United States , Withholding Treatment/ethics , Withholding Treatment/history , Withholding Treatment/legislation & jurisprudence , Young Adult
4.
Asclepio ; 60(2): 233-260, jul.-dic. 2008.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-132246

ABSTRACT

En junio 1906 el diputado conservador y médico Eliseo Cantón presentó en el Parlamento argentino el proyecto de «un gran hospital policlínico», que ocuparía cuatro manzanas, se ubicaría frente a la Facultad de Medicina de la Universidad de Buenos Aires y estaría integrado por 20 institutos con capacidad de 80 camas cada uno. La disputa alrededor de este proyecto faraónico, que se extendió hasta 1917, puso en el centro de la escena a un grupo de «diputados médicos» que utilizaron la tribuna política como espacio para la definición de aspectos centrales del dispositivo hospitalario. La polémica desbordó el Parlamento y alcanzó la esfera pública. La fastuosidad del proyecto en vísperas de los festejos del Centenario o la opulencia de una Buenos Aires que aspiraba a ser París fueron asociadas en el plano simbólico a los progresos de la medicina local y a sus aspiraciones a un lugar en la arena médica internacional. El caso analizado ayuda a comprender las modalidades en que una controversia esencialmente política, que desplegó argumentos tanto económicos, como éticos y cognitivos, intervino en el proceso de construcción del lugar socioprofesional de la práctica médica hospitalaria (AU)


In June, 1906, the conservative deputy and doctor Eliseo Cantón submitted in the Argentinian Parliament the project of a «big polyclinical hospital», which would take up four blocks, would be located in front of the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Buenos Aires and would be made up by 20 institutes with a capacity for 80 beds each. The dispute over this huge project, which lasted until 1917, placed in the middle of the scene, a group of “medical deputies” who used the political platform as a space to define the main aspects of the hospital system. The controversy went beyond the Parliament reaching the public sphere. The lavishness of the project on the eve of the Centenary public festivities or the opulence of a Buenos Aires which aspired to be like Paris were related, in a symbolic view, to the progress of local medicine and its aspirations to be included in the international medical arena. The analysed case helps understand how an essentially political controversy —which led to economical, ethical and cognitive discussions— intervened in the process of bulding up a socio-professional space of the hospital medical practice (AU)


Subject(s)
History, 20th Century , Ambulatory Care Facilities/economics , Ambulatory Care Facilities/history , Clinical Medicine/economics , Clinical Medicine/history , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/history , Government Programs/economics , Government Programs/education , Government Programs/history , Public Policy , Resource Allocation/economics , Resource Allocation/education , Resource Allocation/history , Argentina/ethnology , Politics , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Sector/economics , Public Sector/history , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/ethnology , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/psychology
5.
Am J Hum Biol ; 20(3): 325-36, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18186514

ABSTRACT

We describe the natal dispersal patterns of the Krummhörn population as the outcome of intrafamilial competition. Depending on the affiliation with a specific social group and the sex of the individual, this competition is driven by different factors and obeys a different functional logic: The dispersal patterns of the daughters of landless workers allow a mate competition scenario to be detected, whereas the dispersal behavior of the children of farmers (especially of the sons) is driven by a resource competition scenario.


Subject(s)
Competitive Behavior/physiology , Emigration and Immigration/history , Family , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Reproductive Behavior/statistics & numerical data , Resource Allocation/history , Sexual Behavior/statistics & numerical data , Emigration and Immigration/statistics & numerical data , Female , Geography , Germany , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Marriage/statistics & numerical data , Multivariate Analysis , Reproductive Behavior/history , Sexual Partners , Siblings , Social Behavior
6.
Asclepio ; 60(2): 233-60, 2008.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19618546

ABSTRACT

In June 1906, the conservative deputy and doctor Eliseo Cantón submitted in the Argentinian Parliament the project of a <>, which would take up four blocks, would be located in front of the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Buenos Aires and would be made up by 20 institutes with a capacity for 80 beds each. The dispute over this huge project, which lasted until 1917, placed in the middle of the scene, a group of "medical deputies" who used the political platform as a space to define the main aspects of the hospital system. The controversy went beyond the Parliament reaching the public sphere. The lavishness of the project on the eve of the Centenary public festivities or the opulence of a Buenos Aires which inspired to be like Paris were related, in a symbolic view, to the progress of local medicine and its aspirations to be included in the international medical arena. The analysed case helps understand how an essentially political controversy - which led to economical, ethical and cognitive discussions - intervened in the process of building up a socio-professional space of the hospital medical practice.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care Facilities , Clinical Medicine , Delivery of Health Care , Government Programs , Public Policy , Resource Allocation , Ambulatory Care Facilities/economics , Ambulatory Care Facilities/history , Argentina/ethnology , Clinical Medicine/economics , Clinical Medicine/history , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/history , Government Programs/economics , Government Programs/education , Government Programs/history , History, 20th Century , Politics , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Sector/economics , Public Sector/history , Resource Allocation/economics , Resource Allocation/education , Resource Allocation/history , Social Welfare/economics , Social Welfare/ethnology , Social Welfare/history , Social Welfare/psychology
7.
J Hist Med Allied Sci ; 59(2): 240-72, 2004 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15109155

ABSTRACT

During spring 1947, there was a controversy about the consequences for health of food rationing in Britain; among the issues at stake being the accusation that government departments were failing to release relevant data. The British Medical Association (BMA) responded by establishing a Nutrition Committee to investigate the effects of rationing. Leading members of the BMA expected the committee to intervene decisively in the debate, presenting the medical profession as protectors of the people. The committee, however, was dominated by officials and others who were concerned with presenting the government's record in a good light. Furthermore, by the time the committee reported, the food situation had improved. In the event, the BMA's Nutrition Report was deemed a success if it was received quietly by the press. The deliberations of the committee had involved the controlled release of government data to interested parties, and took place during a period of transition in the government's work in nutrition, from comprehensive emergency intervention toward routine peacetime surveillance. By providing a new set of standards that were used for measuring the adequacy of diets as revealed by the annual National Food Survey, the report contributed to the establishment of the postwar modus operandi of nutrition science and the peacetime system for monitoring the health of the nation.


Subject(s)
Food Supply/history , Nutrition Policy/history , Resource Allocation/history , Societies, Medical/history , Advisory Committees , History, 20th Century , Humans , Politics , United Kingdom
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