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1.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 38(1): 177-196, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32822550

RESUMEN

Although it is not generally done, it is useful to compare the history of the evolution of universal health coverage (UHC) in Canada and Sweden. The majority of citizens in both countries have shared, and continue to share, a commitment to a strong form of single-tier universality in the design of their respective UHC systems. In the postwar era, they also share a remarkably similar timeline in the emergence and entrenchment of single-tier UHC, despite the political and social differences between the two countries. At the same time, UHC was initially designed, implemented, and managed by social democratic governments that held power for long periods of time, creating a path dependency for single-tier Medicare that was difficult for future governments of different ideological persuasions to alter.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud/historia , Política , Bienestar Social/historia , Medicina Estatal/historia , Cobertura Universal del Seguro de Salud/historia , Canadá , Atención a la Salud/estadística & datos numéricos , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Cambio Social/historia , Bienestar Social/estadística & datos numéricos , Medicina Estatal/estadística & datos numéricos , Suecia , Cobertura Universal del Seguro de Salud/estadística & datos numéricos
2.
Demography ; 57(3): 953-977, 2020 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32372334

RESUMEN

Across today's developed world, there is a clear mortality gradient by socioeconomic status for all ages. It is often taken for granted that this gradient was as strong-or even stronger-in the past when social transfers were rudimentary and health care systems were less developed. Some studies based on cross-sectional data have supported this view, but others based on longitudinal data found that this was not the case. If there was no gradient in the past, when did it emerge? To answer this question, we examine social class differences in adult mortality for men and women in southern Sweden over a 200-year period, using unique individual-level register data. We find a systematic class gradient in adult mortality emerging at ages 30-59 only after 1950 for women and after 1970 for men, and in subsequent periods also observable for ages 60-89. Given that the mortality gradient emerged when Sweden transitioned into a modern welfare state with substantial social transfers and a universal health care system, this finding points to lifestyle and psychosocial factors as likely determinants.


Asunto(s)
Mortalidad/historia , Clase Social/historia , Adulto , Distribución por Edad , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Estudios Transversales , Femenino , Conductas Relacionadas con la Salud , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Estilo de Vida , Estudios Longitudinales , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Mortalidad/tendencias , Características de la Residencia , Distribución por Sexo , Bienestar Social/historia , Factores Socioeconómicos , Suecia/epidemiología
3.
Med Humanit ; 46(2): 154-156, 2020 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32591413

RESUMEN

It is something of a cliché to speak of Britain as having been transformed by the traumas of World War II and by its aftermath. From the advent of the 'cradle to grave' Welfare State to the end of (formal) empire, the effects of total war were enduring. Typically, they have been explored in relation to demographic, socioeconomic, technological and geopolitical trends and events. Yet as the articles in this volume observe across a variety of examples, World War II affected individuals, groups and communities in ways both intimate and immediate. For them, its effects were directly embodied That is, they were experienced physically and emotionally-in physical and mental wounds, in ruptured domesticities and new opportunities and in the wholesale disruption and re-formation of communities displaced by bombing and reconstruction. So it is, perhaps, unsurprising that Britain's post-war National Health Service, as the state institution charged with managing the bodies and behaviour of the British people, was itself permeated by a 'wartime spirit' long after the cessation of international hostilities.


Asunto(s)
Política , Bienestar Social/historia , Medicina Estatal/historia , Exposición a la Guerra/historia , Segunda Guerra Mundial , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos
6.
Sociol Health Illn ; 39(2): 244-257, 2017 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28177142

RESUMEN

This article explains how old, poor people living with dementia came to be institutionalised in 19th-century Britain (with a focus on London), and how they were responded to by the people who ran those institutions. The institutions in question are lunatic asylums, workhouses and charitable homes. Old people with dementia were admitted to lunatic asylums, workhouses and charitable homes, but were not welcome there. Using the records of Hanwell lunatic asylum, published texts of psychiatric theory, and the administrative records that all of these institutions generated at local and national levels, this article argues that 'the senile' were a perpetual classificatory residuum in the bureaucracy of 19th-century health and welfare. They were too weak and unresponsive to adhere to the norms of the asylum regime, yet too challenging in their behaviour to conform to that of the workhouse, or the charitable home. Across all of these institutions, old people with dementia were represented as an intractable burden, many decades before the 'ageing society' became a demographic reality.


Asunto(s)
Demencia/historia , Hospitales Psiquiátricos/historia , Institucionalización/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Pobreza , Reino Unido , Poblaciones Vulnerables/psicología
7.
Salud Publica Mex ; 59(4): 429-436, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29211264

RESUMEN

Some interpretations frequently argue that three Disability Models (DM) (Charity, Medical/Rehabilitation, and Social) correspond to historical periods in terms of chronological succession. These views permeate a priori within major official documents on the subject in Mexico. This paper intends to test whether this association is plausible by applying a timeline method. A document search was made with inclusion and exclusion criteria in databases to select representative studies with which to depict milestones in the timelines for each period. The following is demonstrated: 1) models should be considered as categories of analysis and not as historical periods, in that the prevalence of elements of the three models is present to date, and 2) the association between disability models and historical periods results in teleological interpretations of the history of disability in Mexico.


Asunto(s)
Personas con Discapacidad/rehabilitación , Modelos Teóricos , Actitud Frente a la Salud , Organizaciones de Beneficencia/historia , Evaluación de la Discapacidad , Personas con Discapacidad/historia , Personas con Discapacidad/estadística & datos numéricos , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , México/epidemiología , Seguridad Social/historia , Bienestar Social/historia
9.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 33(1): 174-204, 2016.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27344908

RESUMEN

Following the. Second World War, many west European nations developed welfare states to enhance the health and security of their populations, but the systems that were created differed significantly in form and function. This article will provide a comparative overview of the development of hospital services in urban England and France in the first forty years of the 20th century using evidence from two case study cities to enhance our understanding of how these welfare systems developed. It will consider the structure of the two hospital systems; governance and accountability; institutional finance; patients; and the role of the central and local state to argue that the maintenance of two separate providers and the exclusion of hospitals from state health insurance in England prompted a different set of responses to the delivery of hospital care compared to what was found in the unified and increasingly state-funded French system.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud/historia , Hospitales/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Atención a la Salud/legislación & jurisprudencia , Atención a la Salud/organización & administración , Inglaterra , Francia , Historia del Siglo XX , Hospitales/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Bienestar Social/legislación & jurisprudencia
10.
J Hist Med Allied Sci ; 70(4): 588-622, 2015 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25159685

RESUMEN

This article uses data drawn from the overseers' accounts and supporting documentation in thirty-six parishes spread over four English counties, to answer three basic questions. First, what was the character, extent, structure, range of activities, and remuneration of the nursing labor force under the Old Poor Law between the late eighteenth century and the implementation of the New Poor Law in the 1830s? Second, were there regional and intra-regional differences in the scale and nature of spending on nursing care for the sick poor? Third, how might one explain such differences? The article suggests that nursing became an increasingly important category of spending for the poor law from the later eighteenth century, but that there were significant variations within and (particularly) between English counties in parochial attitudes toward the provision of nursing for the sick poor. These variations can be explained by applying a matrix of explanatory variables ranging from the minor (differences in how parishes defined "nursing") through to the major (long-standing cultural attitudes toward the responsibility of parishioners to their sick compatriots and the ingrained expectations of the sick poor). The article also throws new light on the hidden aspects of female labor force participation, pointing to the development of professional nursing networks long before the later nineteenth century.


Asunto(s)
Historia de la Enfermería , Enfermeras y Enfermeros/legislación & jurisprudencia , Pobreza/legislación & jurisprudencia , Bienestar Social/historia , Inglaterra , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Enfermeras y Enfermeros/economía , Pobreza/economía , Pobreza/historia , Bienestar Social/economía , Bienestar Social/legislación & jurisprudencia
11.
Br J Sociol ; 66(4): 645-72, 2015 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26607691

RESUMEN

Those students who were among the first sociology graduates in the UK barely feature in standard histories of the discipline, which all have an intellectual and institutional focus. This article remedies this neglect by researching the social backgrounds and later careers of sociology graduates from the London School of Economics and Political Science [LSE] and Bedford College for Women from the first such graduate in 1907 until those graduating in the 1930s. Data for this exercise were compiled from a variety of sources. The more important are: UK censuses, especially that of 1911; various civil registration records; archived student files; and, for the graduates who entered university teaching, issues of the Yearbook of the Universities of the Empire [later the Commonwealth Universities' Yearbook]. The dataset includes all identified graduates in the BSc(Econ), Special Subject Sociology, degree from 1907 to 1935 and all in the BA (Honours) in Sociology degree from 1925 to 1939. LSE sociology graduates tended to be older and to have more cosmopolitan backgrounds, with fathers more likely than for Bedford College graduates to come from commercial rather than professional backgrounds. Both institutions' graduates' careers tended to the Civil Service and local government. LSE graduates gravitated to education, especially to higher education if male, whilst those of Bedford College went into welfare work, countering a stereotype from some previous literature that especially women graduates were heavily constrained to follow careers in schoolteaching. The article also gives comparisons with the social-class profile and career destinations of several cohorts of postwar sociology graduates, noting a number of similarities.


Asunto(s)
Selección de Profesión , Sociología/historia , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Masculino , Bienestar Social/historia , Sociología/educación , Reino Unido
12.
Br J Sociol ; 66(4): 673-90, 2015 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26373464

RESUMEN

T. H. Marshall in his famous tract Citizenship and Social Class wrote briefly about what he called 'industrial citizenship', a type of belonging rooted in the workplace. Here Marshall's ideas are developed alongside a consideration of Durkheim's Professional Ethics and Civic Morals together with research material from the Guinness Company. It shows the way the Company actively sought to create 'Guinness citizenship' within its London brewery. The article draws out the ways in which the significance and potential of work based citizenship for ameliorating the ills of industrial society are clearly articulated in mid-twentieth century Britain and echo earlier neglected Durkheimian sociological ideas on work. These ideas have real potential to inform contemporary academic and policy debates about the nature of capitalism and the form and content of work now and in the future.


Asunto(s)
Empleo/historia , Desarrollo Industrial/historia , Cerveza/historia , Industria de Alimentos/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Londres , Política Pública , Bienestar Social/historia , Lugar de Trabajo/historia
13.
Med Humanit ; 40(1): 3-10, 2014 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23918817

RESUMEN

How can we assess the reciprocal impacts of politics and medicine in the contemporary period? Using the example of rickets in twentieth century Britain, I will explore the ways in which a preventable, curable non-infectious disease came to have enormous political significance, first as a symbol of socioeconomic inequality, then as evidence of racial and ethnic health disparities. Between the 1920s and 1980s, clinicians, researchers, health workers, members of Parliament and later Britain's growing South Asian ethnic communities repeatedly confronted the British state with evidence of persistent nutritional deficiency among the British poor and British Asians. Drawing on bitter memories of the 'Hungry Thirties', postwar rickets-so often described as a 'Victorian' disease-became a high-profile sign of what was variously constructed as a failure of the Welfare State; or of the political parties charged with its protection; or of ethnically Asian migrants and their descendants to adapt to British life and norms. Here I will argue that rickets prompted such consternation not because of its severity, the cost of its treatment, or even its prevalence; but because of the ease with which it was politicised. I will explore the ways in which this condition was envisioned, defined and addressed as Britain moved from the postwar consensus to Thatcherism, and as Britain's diverse South Asian communities developed from migrant enclaves to settled multigenerational ethnic communities.


Asunto(s)
Política de Salud/historia , Pobreza , Raquitismo/historia , Asia , Emigración e Inmigración/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Política Nutricional/historia , Política , Pobreza/historia , Raquitismo/prevención & control , Bienestar Social/historia , Factores Socioeconómicos , Medicina Estatal/historia , Reino Unido
14.
Versicherungsmedizin ; 66(2): 88-95, 2014 Jun 01.
Artículo en Alemán | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25000629

RESUMEN

Comparative investigations centre on attitudes of demand and consumption in ethnic groups living in affluence, beginning with the first pre-Christian century in the Roman Empire on the one hand and in Western countries in the post-industrial age of hight-tech in times of far advanced globalization on the other. In this context medical, psycho-social and socio-economical aspects will be treated considering ideal and cultural breaks. Renowned Roman and Greek historians, physicians and philosophers are vouching as witnesses of the times for developments in the antique world with their literary works, in excerpts and verbatim. Obviously general moral decay is a side effect of any affluence. Even in the antiquitiy the "ideology of renewal" proclaimed by the Emperor Augustus died away mostly in emptiness just as do the appeals for improving one's state of health for surviving directed to all citizens in our time. With the rise of Rome as a world power general relative affluence was widespread to such an extent that diseases caused by affluence have occured as mass phenomena. The old Roman virtues of temperance and frugality turned into greed and addiction to pleasure. In this way the Roman people under the banner of affluence degenerated into a society of leisure time, consumption, fun and throwaway mentality. The decline of the Empire was predetermined. The promise of affluence which modern Europe is addicted to is demanding its price following the principle of causality. "How the pictures resemble each other!"


Asunto(s)
Características Culturales/historia , Etnicidad/historia , Internacionalidad/historia , Estilo de Vida/historia , Morbilidad , Valores Sociales/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Factores Socioeconómicos/historia , Europa (Continente) , Grecia , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Ciudad de Roma
15.
Soc Work Health Care ; 52(2-3): 110-24, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23521380

RESUMEN

Despite the reputation of Melbourne, Australia, as a socially advanced city in the early twentieth century, professional social work training did not commence at what was then the city's only university, until 1941. This article describes the strategies by a coalition of wealthy philanthropists, welfare organizations, medical practitioners, social workers, and The University of Melbourne itself to establish such professional training. It does so with exploration of the hitherto unrecognized influence of New York Social Work and the unique intellectual leadership of the director of training of the founding Social Work course in Melbourne, Miss Jocelyn S. Hylsop.


Asunto(s)
Personal de Salud/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Servicio Social/historia , Universidades/historia , Australia , Conducta Cooperativa , Obtención de Fondos/historia , Personal de Salud/educación , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Liderazgo , Servicio Social/educación , Universidades/organización & administración
16.
Medizinhist J ; 48(3-4): 241-72, 2013.
Artículo en Alemán | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25643478

RESUMEN

In the 1920s patients of mental hospitals were more and more treated with work therapy, as the paper will show using the example of the Staatskrankenanstalt Hamburg-Langenhorn that had been founded in 1893 as Irren-Colonie. Based on a qualitative analysis of administration records and patient files the paper poses the question after the effects that work therapy had inside and outside the hospital and examines the interactions between psychiatric acting and economic as well as welfare state needs.


Asunto(s)
Hospitales Psiquiátricos/historia , Trastornos Mentales/historia , Trastornos Mentales/rehabilitación , Terapia Ocupacional/historia , Psicoterapia/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Alemania , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Trabajo/historia
18.
Sociol Health Illn ; 34(7): 1070-84, 2012 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22530616

RESUMEN

It is now over thirty years since Claus Offe theorised the crisis tendencies of the welfare state in late capitalism. As part of that work he explored ongoing and irresolvable forms of crisis management in parliamentary democracies: capitalism cannot live with the welfare state but also cannot live without it. This article examines the continued relevance of this analysis by Offe, by applying its basic assumptions to the response of the British welfare state to mental health problems, at the turn of the twenty first century. His general theoretical abstractions are tested against the empirical picture of mental health service priorities, evident since the 1980s, in sections dealing with: re-commodification tendencies; the ambiguity of wage labour in the mental health workforce; the emergence of new social movements; and the limits of legalism.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Mentales/historia , Servicios de Salud Mental/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Medicina Estatal/historia , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Institucionalización/tendencias , Sindicatos , Masculino , Trastornos Mentales/terapia , Servicios de Salud Mental/economía , Privatización/tendencias , Políticas de Control Social/historia , Reino Unido
19.
Coll Antropol ; 36(3): 1057-62, 2012 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23213973

RESUMEN

By using published and unpublished sources from various archival series kept in the Rovinj Heritage Museum, Chapter Archives of Rovinj and the Diocesan Archives of Porec the authors shed new light and present the health and social care system in the city of Rovinj covering the period which goes from the mid 15th to the mid 19th century. Altruistic mentality of individual citizens, lay and ecclesiastical institutions as well as the need to prevent diseases urged the foundation of medical-social-religious-charitable institutions. In the researched period Rovinj flourished demographically and economically, so that health and social institutions included offices in charge of prevention. When it came to various aspects of social activities, decisions were made by the foreign political authorities--Venetian, French and Austrian administration, although the first initiative would always come from the Rovinj Commune or individual citizens.


Asunto(s)
Control de Enfermedades Transmisibles/historia , Hospitales/historia , Higiene/historia , Medicina Preventiva/historia , Bienestar Social/historia , Croacia , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos
20.
G Ital Med Lav Ergon ; 34(3 Suppl): 728-32, 2012.
Artículo en Italiano | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23405763

RESUMEN

This paper considers parents empoyment laws in Italy, starting with the very first one in 1902. The legislative development is comparised with Italian history in twentieth and twenty-first centuries, with a particular attention to the Mussolinian age (1922-1943), the Constitution and 1975 Family Law. Social environment is also analyzed in this complex situation.


Asunto(s)
Padres , Bienestar Social , Trabajo , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Italia , Bienestar Social/historia , Bienestar Social/legislación & jurisprudencia
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