Lecture Seven: Public Health
Lecture Seven for HIST 30626
Why Public Health at all?
- Why let in dangerous people?
- Is health so very complicated?
- Is fun more important than health?
- Does God want us to die? Does God want them to die?
- For your own good, for the public good: the incontestable mandate
Three Kinds of Public Health
- Reactive: responding to epidemics
- Boards of Health
- Police: regulating commerce
- Medical registrars, nuisance convictions
- Proactive: preventing disease; improving life
- Liberal evangelicals
- Utilitarians
- Moralists (the Chadwick Report, 1842)
The American Context
- Individual Liberty
- States' rights
- The marine hospital service
- The evangelical mandate
- Americanism vs. foreigners
Public Health and the Federal Government
- 1798: Marine Hospital Service
- 1879-1882: U.S. National Board of Health - $500,000
- 1902: U.S. Public Health Service and Marine Hospital Service
- 1912: Public Health Service
- Post-World War II: National Institutes of Health
Health and Immigration
- Opposition to Scotch-Irish/German in 18th Century
- George Washington, "ignorant"
- Benjamin Franklin, "most stupid"
- Population Statistics
- 1785-1830: 375,000
- 1830-1860: 4.5 million, including 1.7 million Irish (1841-1860) and 1.4 million Germans; Catholic population increases from 75,000 to 3 million
- 1864: Immigration encouragement; 1875: Immigration restriction; 1879, 1882: health related versions (contagion, dependency, mental illness)
- 1882-1943: Chinese Exclusion Act (100,000 Chinese by 1880)
- 1891: Medical exclusion (epileptics, beggars, and anarchists)
- 1907: Dillingham Commission (Slavs, Hebrews, Italians; literacy test)
- 1921: numerical quotas
- 1924: National Origins Act
Constituencies for Public Health
- State Issues: population, prosperity, authority
- Community Issues: property, public safety, disease
- Class Issues: political and economic power, access to medical care
- Professional Issues: Who controls? Doctors or others?
San Francisco
- March-May 1900: Suspicion of plague in Chinatown - cordon sanitaire
- Late May 1900: Federal decision against inoculation
- June 1900: Federal decision against racial quarantine
Typhoid Mary
- Mary Mallon (1869-1938)
- 1907: Soper Investigation
- 1907-1910: First confinement
- 1915-1938: Second confinement
- Issues: gender roles, ethnicity, class, politics
- Why did Mallon become the cause celebre?
Disease theories and government
- Contagion
- Miasm
- Epidemic constitution, atmosphere
- Social sin
New York City
Population statistics:
| Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1790 | 33,100 |
| 1810 | 96,300 |
| 1830 | 197,100 |
| 1850 | 515,500 |
| 1860 | 805,500 |
Public health
- 1842:
- Croton Aqueduct
- N.Y. Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor
- 1845: Sanitary Condition of the Laboring Population of New York, John Griscom
- 1864: Report on the Sanitary Condition of the City (Citizens Commission)
- 1866: Metropolitan Health Act
- Medical inspectors, disinfectant stations, hospitals, laboratory
Griscom vs. Hartley: Progressive and Conservative Evangelicals
- Griscom: Environmental evangelism
- Hartley: Sin and Grace - What must I do?
- Public health as religious freedom?
- Their attitudes to St. Vincent's and Dr. McNeven
New York City, Fifth Ward in 1864
- Population: ~22,000
- 74 blocks (32 good, 25 mixed, 17 bad)
- Houses: 1244, including 450 tenements (more than 3 families, but most fewer than 6 families)
- Most of the rest are boarding houses
- Liquor stores: 341 (1:3.65 dwellings)
- Brothels: 81+
- Stores, Etc.: 283
- Factories: 151
- Stables: 108
Interpretations of New York City's Experience
- "The passage of the ... act was hailed as a great victory for American democracy, yet what it did was to take away from New York voters responsibility for the City's health" - J. Duffy
- Pioneering in the expansion of medical responsibility
- An anodyne to social tension; Draft riots of 1863
- Professionals on the make
The Peculiar Problem of Slavery: In Whose Interest is Health?
- Power of the sick role: freedom through disease?
- Slave diseases
- Racial: malaria, tuberculosis (tabes mesenterica), pneumonia
- Corn-pork diet: selling quarters crops
- "that [some] ... sold ... food indicates that ... some received sufficient nutrition from their regular rations"
- Environment: hookworm, respiratory diseases, typhoid
- Medical care: whipping, medicine as punishment?, reliance on folk healing
2007,
by the Contributing Authors.
This work is licensed under a
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Cite/attribute Resource.
Hamlin, C. (2007, December 06). Lecture Seven: Public Health. Retrieved May 22, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/history/medicine-and-public-health-in-american-history/lecture-notes/lecture-seven-public-health.






















