Lecture Three: Medicine and American Geography
Lecture Three for HIST 30626
Medical Theory to 1900: From Place and Health to Disease
Health Orientation to Disease Orientation
- States of health are subjectively defined on one or more continua
- States of ill health sufficiently serious to be subjectively understood as illnesses are occasions for seeking medical help or for claiming the sick role
- Diseases are objectively defined temporary departures from a monolithic state of health
Causal thinking in medicine
- Pre-modern: multicausal (prevailing in California prior to around
1880)
- Atmospheric constitution or regional character: explains beginning of epidemic or prevailing illnesses
- Local atmosphere: explains predisposing state of health, map help to explain origin of case of disease
- Agents, contagia: may help to explain origins of particular case
- Personal constitution: genetic predispositions, state of immune system, any factors relating to resistance (i.e., dehydration, exhaustion, cold)
- Modern: monocausal
- Germ theoretic
- Concern for agents
- Secondarily for immune status
- "Post"-Modern: multicausal
- Network
- Risk Factor (multiple regression)
- Concern with wellness, workdays
Humoral theories
- Hippocrates, c. 5th-4th century, B.C.
- Galen, 2nd century, A.D.
- Are you Phlegmatic, Sanguine, Bilious and choleric, or Splenetic and melancholic?
What happened to place-body?
- Indoor work; climate control
- Immediate mobility
- Disappearance of "race"
- Impermeable skin
- Pharmacological post-modern self
- Designer body
The Centrality of Malaria
- Fevers
- Continuous: typhus, typhoid, flu, ...
- Intermittent: malaria
- Vivax: Benign tertian (U.S. North Central)
- Falciparum: Most deadly (U.S. South)
- Yellow
Dealing with the problems of California's health
- The Critics
- T.M. Logan: the central valley is inherently unhealthy
- Marshall Chipman: mining, canalization is destroying health
- The Defenders
- Boosters and the gold rush
- Locals
- It's worse down the road
- It's getting better
- Civilization (my crop, my estate, my canal) is geographical health
improvement
- "Rain follows the plow"
- "Drains save lives"
2007,
by the Contributing Authors.
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Cite/attribute Resource.
Hamlin, C. (2007, December 06). Lecture Three: Medicine and American Geography. Retrieved February 12, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/history/medicine-and-public-health-in-american-history/lecture-notes/lecture-three-medicine-and-american-geography.






















