A History of Public Health

Front Cover
JHU Press, Apr 1, 2015 - Medical - 440 pages

George Rosen's wide-ranging account of public health's long and fascinating history is an indispensable classic.

Since publication in 1958, George Rosen's classic book has been regarded as the essential international history of public health. Describing the development of public health in classical Greece, imperial Rome, England, Europe, the United States, and elsewhere, Rosen illuminates the lives and contributions of the field's great figures. He considers such community health problems as infectious disease, water supply and sewage disposal, maternal and child health, nutrition, and occupational disease and injury. And he assesses the public health landscape of health education, public health administration, epidemiological theory, communicable disease control, medical care, statistics, public policy, and medical geography.

Rosen, writing in the 1950s, may have had good reason to believe that infectious diseases would soon be conquered. But as Dr. Pascal James Imperato writes in the new foreword to this edition, infectious disease remains a grave threat. Globalization, antibiotic resistance, and the emergence of new pathogens and the reemergence of old ones, have returned public health efforts to the basics: preventing and controlling chronic and communicable diseases and shoring up public health infrastructures that provide potable water, sewage disposal, sanitary environments, and safe food and drug supplies to populations around the globe.

A revised introduction by Elizabeth Fee frames the book within the context of the historiography of public health past, present, and future, and an updated bibliography by Edward T. Morman includes significant books on public health history published between 1958 and 2014. For seasoned professionals as well as students, A History of Public Health is visionary and essential reading.

 

Contents

Foreword
ix
A Shared Social Vision
xiii
George Rosen Public Health and History
liii
Preface to the 1958 Edition
lxvii
The Origins of Public Health
1
Health and the Community in the GrecoRoman World
5
Public Health in the Middle Ages 5001500 AD
18
Mercantilism Absolutism and the Health of the People 15001750
37
Industrialism and the Sanitary Movement 18301875
106
The Bacteriological Era and Its Aftermath 18751950
169
The Bacteriological Era and Its Aftermath Concluded
200
Bibliography
295
Classified Bibliography of Secondary Sources
296
Subject Index
345
Name Index
363
Copyright

Health in a Period of Enlightenment and Revolution 17501830
68

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About the author (2015)

George Rosen (1910–1977), MD, MPH, PhD, was a professor of health education at the School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine, Columbia University, and the editor of the American Journal of Public Health.

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