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Public Health: The Development of a Discipline, from the Age of Hippocrates to the Progressive Era Volume 1 (None)

Contributor(s): Schneider, Dona (Editor), Lilienfeld, David E (Editor), Winkelstein, Warren (Foreword by)

ISBN: 9780813542324

Publisher: Rutgers University Press

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Pub Date: February 1, 2008

Dewey: 362.1

LCCN: 2007019970

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.60" H x 9.19" L x 6.23" W ( 2.36 lbs) 768 pages

BISAC Categories:

Medical | Public Health | History

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Public health as a discipline grew out of traditional Western medicine but expanded to include interests in social policy, hygiene, epidemiology, infectious disease, sanitation, and health education. This book, the first of a two-volume set, is a collection of important and representative historical texts that serve to trace and to illuminate the development of conceptions, policies, and treatments in public health from the dawn of Western civilization through the Progressive Era of the early twentieth century.

The editors provide annotated readings and biographical details to punctuate the historical timeline and to provide students with insights into the progression of ideas, initiatives, and reforms in the field. From Hippocrates and John Graunt in the early period, to John Snow and Florence Nightingale during the nineteenth-century sanitary reform movement, to Upton Sinclair and Margaret Sanger in the Progressive Era, readers follow the identification, evolution, and implementation of public health concepts as they came together under one discipline.

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