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Tuberculosis was perceived for the first time in the early
twentieth century as a major problem warranting state involvement
in a national campaign for its eradication. This book examines the
rise of the anti-tuberculosis movement in Britain, and the
development of a new public health service and medical specialism,
discussing why the campaign took the particular form it did. The
importance of the study lies in its conception of medical history
not as a series of scientific discoveries and technological
developments, but as an integral part of a broader social and
political scene. The patient, often neglected in medical history,
is given close attention in an attempt to understand how the
disease has been viewed during this century, and the impact it has
had on society. Below the Magic Mountain shows that medicine cannot
be understood in isolation from the society of which it is a part.
The contributors to this collection look into the experiences of
women in the Western world going through pregnancy and birth over
the last hundred years.
This edited collection looks at the experiences of women going
through pregnancy and birth over the last 100 years. The essays
explore the impact of the professionalization of the medical
services, the factors that influenced women's decisions over their
choice of healthcare and whether childbirth was seen as a natural
or a medical event.
Natural childbirth and rooming in; artificial insemination and in
vitro fertilisation; sterilisation and abortion: women's health and
reproduction went through a revolution in the twentieth century as
scientific advances confronted ethical and political dilemmas. In
New Zealand, the major site for this revolution was National
Women's Hospital. Established in Auckland in 1946, with a
purpose-built building that opened in 1964, National Women's was
the home of medical breakthroughs by Sir William (Bill) Liley and
Sir Graham (Mont) Liggins; of the Lawson quintuplets and the
'glamorous gynaecologists'; and of scandals surrounding the
'unfortunate experiment' and the neonatal chest physiotherapy
inquiry. In this major history, Linda Bryder traces the rise and
fall of National Women's over half a century in order to tell a
wider story of reproductive health. She uses the varying
perspectives of doctors, nurses, midwives, consumer groups and
patients to show how together their dialogue shaped the nature of
motherhood and women's health in twentieth-century New Zealand.
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