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  • - Some Aspects of the Legal Regulation of Abortion in England from 1803 to 1982
    av John Keown
    720,-

    Ranging from the beginning of the nineteenth century to the 1980s, this book focusses on the evolution of the law and medical practice of abortion in England. Dr Keown considers the performance of abortion by doctors, and the influence the medical profession had on the restriction of the law in the nineteenth century and on its relaxation in the twentieth.

  • - A Study in the Fortunes of Scholasticism and Medical Science in European Intellectual Life
    av Ian Maclean
    520,-

  • - Richard M. Bucke and the Practice of Late Nineteenth-Century Psychiatry
    av Samuel Edward Dole Shortt
    450,-

    This 1986 book explores the theory and practice of late nineteenth-century psychiatry. Psychiatric theory is discussed less as an objective body of biomedical knowledge than as a product of the social turmoil that characterized the final decades of the nineteenth century.

  • - Benefactors and their Motives in Turin, 1541-1789
    av Sandra (University of Exeter) Cavallo
    520 - 1 380,-

    This is the first thorough study of charity, and medical and poor relief, in post-Renaissance Italy. It departs from current interpretations by emphasising the various circumstances that motivated individual men and women to become involved in charity. It also challenges the assumption that continental welfare provision was characterised by the institutional confinement of the poor and sick.

  • - The Making of a Biomedical Discipline
    av Robert E. Kohler
    690,-

    This penetrating case study of institution building and entrepreneurship in science shows how a minor medical speciality evolved into a large and powerful academic discipline. Drawing extensively on little-used archival sources, the author analyses in detail how biomedical science became a central part of medical training and practice.

  • - Quantifying Health and Population in Eighteenth-Century England and France
    av Andrea A. (University of Rhode Island) Rusnock
    520 - 1 240,-

    Through a compelling comparative analysis, Vital Accounts charts the work of the physicians, clergymen and government officials who crafted the sciences of political and medical arithmetic in England and France during the long eighteenth century, before the emergence of statistics and regular government censuses.

  • av Hilary Marland
    790,-

    This ambitious book presents an across-the-board study of medicine, in any urban centre, for any period of British history. By selecting Wakefield and Huddersfield as contrasting types of northern towns, and examining in details their systems of medical care, Dr Marland has written a local history which says something important about the country as a whole.

  • - Madness, Anxiety and Healing in Seventeenth-Century England
    av Michael Macdonald
    650,-

    Mystical Bedlam explores the social history of insanity of early seventeenth-century England by means of a detailed analysis of the records of Richard Napier, a clergyman and astrological physician, who treated over 2000 mentally disturbed patients between 1597 and 1634.

  • av Doreen A. Evenden
    620 - 1 030,-

    This is a comprehensive study of midwives in seventeenth-century London. This volume explores the midwives' training and their licensing in an unofficial apprenticeship by the Church and places the midwives in their socioeconomic context by examining a wide range of seventeenth-century sources.

  • - Breast Cancer and American Society
    av Robert A. Aronowitz
    470 - 686,-

    In the early nineteenth century in the United States, cancer in the breast was a rare disease. Now it seems that breast cancer is everywhere. Written by a medical historian who is also a doctor, Unnatural History tells how and why this happened.

  • av Mary E. Fissell
    790 - 1 500,-

    In early modern England, housewives, clergymen, bloodletters, herb women, and patients told authoritative tales about the body. By the end of the eighteenth century, however, medicine had begun to drown out these voices. This book argues that changes in the relationship between rich and poor underlay this rise in medicine's authority.

  • - Gynaecology and Gender in England, 1800-1929
    av Ornella Moscucci
    636,-

    Is women's destiny rooted in their biology? This book argues that the definition of femininity as propounded by gynaecological science is a cultural product of a wider, more political context.

  • - The Quest for Biological Regeneration in Twentieth-Century France
    av Indiana) Schneider & William H. (Purdue University
    820 - 1 586,-

    This book, first published in 2001, explains how eugenicists tried to bring about the biological regeneration of the French population. It is the first attempt to set forth the major components of French eugenics both for comparison with other countries and to show the interaction of the various movements that comprised it.

  • - Psychosurgery and the Limits of Medicine
    av San Francisco) Pressman & Jack D. (University of California
    700 - 1 146,-

    This book, first published in 1998, revisits the period in the 1940s and 1950s when tens of thousands of Americans were operated on for mental illness. By exploring the history of psychiatry as a discipline and a medical specialty, it explains why so many trusted and caring physicians believed that the procedure benefited their patients.

  • - East Coast Fever in Rhodesia and the Transvaal
    av New York) Cranefield & Paul F. (Rockefeller University
    766 - 1 586,-

    East Coast fever can kill 95% of a herd of cattle in three weeks. The disease was unknown to western science until it was introduced into Rhodesia in 1901. This book describes the social and economic impact, the scientific investigations into it, and the effort to control it.

  • - Medical Possibility and Social Constraint, 1884-1984
    av Donald Denoon
    520,-

    This book concerns the development of institutional medicine, medical practice and health care during the initial colonisation and later colonial rule of Papua New Guinea. It discusses the relationship between public health and the medical profession and colonial bureaucracy, and also analyses the profession's social and technical ideas.

  • - Anglo-Indian Preventive Medicine 1859-1914
    av Mark Harrison
    636,-

    The first major study of public health in British India that covers many previously unresearched areas such as European attitudes towards India; the fate of public health under Indian control; and the effects of quarantine on colonial trade and the pilgrimage to Mecca.

  • - The Dilemma of American Nursing, 1850-1945
    av Susan M. Reverby
    580,-

    Ordered to Care provides an overall history of American nursing's development and examines the context of women's history and the social history of health care. She discusses why nursing will have to move beyond its obligation to care, and what the implications of this change would be for all of us.

  • - Science and Therapeutic Reform in the United States, 1900-1990
    av Harry M. (The Johns Hopkins University) Marks
    520 - 1 070,-

    This book explores the origins of our contemporary system of drug regulation and of the modern clinical trial. Harry Marks looks at the science and politics of drug evaluation and explores the influence of academic ideals on governmental drug regulation.

  • - Medicine, Science, and Culture
    av Joan Cadden
    580,-

    This book examines how scientific ideas about sex differences in the later Middle Ages participated in the broader culture's assumptions about gender. Cadden discusses how medieval natural philosophical theories and medical notions about reproduction and sexual impulses and experiences intersected with ideas about the roles of men and women.

  • - Disease Theories and Medical Practice in Britain, 1865-1900
    av Michael Worboys
    480 - 1 366,-

    Spreading Germs discusses how modern ideas on the bacterial causes of communicable diseases were constructed and spread within the British medical profession in the last third of the nineteenth century. Michael Worboys surveys many existing interpretations of this pivotal moment in modern medicine.

  • av John M. (University of Minnesota) Eyler
    820 - 1 330,-

    This book examines the transformation of the British public health system, during the years 1885-1935. Particular attention is drawn to Newsholme's role in constructing a highly successful local health programme, his tenure at the Local Government Board, his post-retirement studies of international health systems, and his statistical and epidemiological studies.

  • - Life of William A Hammond, American Neurologist
    av Madison) Blustein & Bonnie Ellen (University of Wisconsin
    690 - 1 560,-

    William Alexander Hammond, M. D. (1828-1900), one of the most successful American physicians of the nineteenth century. This biography shows how he developed his New York practice in neurology as a vehicle for pursuing broad scientific interests within the limits of the solo-practitioner structure of the medicine of his day.

  • - Anthropology, Physiology, and Philosophical Medicine in France, 1750-1850
    av Elizabeth A. (Oklahoma State University) Williams
    690 - 1 366,-

    This book explores the tradition of the 'science of man' in French medicine of the era 1750-1850. Its chief purpose is to recover the history of a holistic tradition in French medicine that has been neglected because it lay outside the mainstream themes of modern medicine.

  • av Madison) Broman & Thomas H. (University of Wisconsin
    620 - 1 236,-

    By examining German university medicine between 1750 and 1820, this book presents a new interpretation of the emergence of modern medical science. In contrast to the standard picture of the medical profession before 1800 which treats physicians almost exclusively as healers, Thomas H. Broman argues that healing was only one aspect of a complex professional identity in 1750.

  • - Britain, 1800-1854
    av Christopher Hamlin
    650 - 1 730,-

    By carefully retelling the story of the foundations of public health in industrial revolution Britain not as the triumph of responsible government over urban filth but as a politically savvy choice to undermine the potential of a public medicine to provide a basis for radical criticism of laissez faire capitalism, this book opens the possibility for understanding health as a matter of justice.

  • - A History of Imperial Tropical Medicine
    av Nova Scotia) Farley & John (Dalhousie University
    620 - 1 310,-

    Professor Farley describes how governments and organizations faced one particular tropical disease, bilharzia or schistosomiasis.

  • - The Early Nineteenth-Century French Public Health Movement
    av Ann Elizabeth Fowler (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University) La Berge
    636 - 1 716,-

    Mission and Method challenges the prevalent notion that the British were the leaders in the nineteenth-century public health movement and set the model for similar movements elsewhere. It suggests that an active and influential french public health movement antedated the British and greatly influenced British public health leaders.

  • - Reformer of Science and Medicine
    av Walter Pagel
    706,-

    Van Helmont's theories on the nature of life, biological time, physiology and disease, the structure of matter, and the processes of chemical change are rendered obscure by Renaissance his tendency to mysticism. This intellectual biography, the culmination of many years of reflection on the topics discusses, illuminates Van Helmont's creative insights.

  • - Hospital Pupils and Practitioners in Eighteenth-Century London
    av Susan C. (University of Iowa) Lawrence
    820 - 1 466,-

    Charitable Knowledge explores the formation of the teaching hospital in eighteenth-century London. The metropolis lacked a university until the nineteenth century, so the seven major voluntary hospitals were crucial sites for educating surgeons and visiting physicians. Lawrence explains how charity patients became teaching objects, and how hospitals became medical schools.

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