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5 - The Health of Populations

from Part I - History and Medicine

Thomas R. Cole
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Houston School of Medicine
Nathan S. Carlin
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Houston School of Medicine
Ronald A. Carson
Affiliation:
University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston
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Summary

[T]he Fury of the Contagion was such at some particular Times, and People sicken’d so fast, and died so soon, that it was impossible and indeed to no purpose to go about to enquire who was sick and who was well.

– Daniel Defoe

Weep not for me; think rather of the pestilence and the deaths of so many others.

– Marcus Aurelius

Abstract

This chapter explores the history of public health. Beginning with a discussion of the health of populations in prehistory and antiquity, it examines how religious institutions of the medieval period took on the obligation to care for the poor, the needy, and the sick; how public health officials responded to plague outbreaks in the early modern period; how infectious disease devastated New World populations; how a democratic, person-centered view, which established health as a right of citizenship, arose in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; and how various states have dealt with the health of populations since then. Then, with a focus on some contemporary issues such as climate change, it considers some of the challenges facing public health efforts in the twenty-first century.

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Medical Humanities , pp. 89 - 103
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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