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Blood, coughs, and fever: tuberculosis and the working class of Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1885-1915

Reber, Vera Blinn.
Social History of Medicine ; 12(1): 73-100, Apr.1999. tab, graf
Artigo em Inglês | HISA (história da saúde) | ID: his-10989
Using medical histories and municipal public health reports, it focuses on tuberculous men, women, and children of the working poor in Buenos Aires between 1885 and 1915. Crowded living conditions and an unhealthy working environment increased the poor's susceptibility to tuberculosis. Both public health officials and physicians assumed that the living and working conditions of the labour class encouraged the spread of tuberculosis from their neighbourhoods to those of the elite. The Anti-Tuberculosis League and the efforts of doctors to bring about prevention and cure, which generally mirrored those of the United States and Europe, failed to decrease the rate of death from tuberculosis in Buenos Aires between 1885 and 1915. Medical knowledge was limited, while public health officials had neither the time nor the funds to change a system that was embedded in the working and living structures of the community. The tuberculous poor chose to evade prevention policies and relied on the limited services of sanatoriums, clinics, and hospitals only as a last resort. (AU)
Biblioteca responsável: BR1273.1
Localização: BR526.1