George Rosen (1)
Author of A History of Public Health
For other authors named George Rosen, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
George Rosen (1910-1977), MD, MPH, PhD, was a professor of health education at the School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine, Columbia University, and the editor of the American Journal of Public Health.
Image credit: via AAHM
Works by George Rosen
Madness in Society: Chapters in the Historical Sociology of Mental Illness (1968) 32 copies, 1 review
Peasant society in a changing economy : comparative development in Southeast Asia and India (1975) 5 copies
Arrow poisons 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Rosen, George
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
George Rosen wrote this book, originally published in 1958, about the progress that humanity has made in this field. He was optimistic about the progress made with antibiotics and vaccines. He saw opportunity for the eradication of smallpox and malaria. He saw the trajectory of human progress as going upwards.
In 2018, this optimism has been somewhat muted by the realities of HIV/AIDS, by the lingering persistence of many infectious diseases, by the advent of antibiotic-resistant organisms, show more and by populist movements like the anti-vaccinators. The second half of the twentieth century brought a huge dose of reality to the field of public health.
The updated prologues to this book testify to these historical events. Nonetheless, Rosen's work provides a great template and introduction to the field of public health. From its early beginnings in Egypt, Greece, Rome, and other centers of civilization in the ancient world, public health campaigns have bettered the lives of billions.
I found it especially interesting to survey the different attitudes towards public health and nationalized medicine in various countries. For example, Germany has viewed healthcare with a nationalistic lens dating back to the nineteenth century and the advent of German nationalism. The United States, however, has long been suspicious of such an organizational plan and has suffered inefficiencies due to its paranoia. Cuba has excellent healthcare efficiency. The UK, originally split along political lines about nationalized healthcare, has since viewed its National Health Service with a great deal of national pride. Perhaps there is hope for the United States to resolve its internal squabbles after all. show less
In 2018, this optimism has been somewhat muted by the realities of HIV/AIDS, by the lingering persistence of many infectious diseases, by the advent of antibiotic-resistant organisms, show more and by populist movements like the anti-vaccinators. The second half of the twentieth century brought a huge dose of reality to the field of public health.
The updated prologues to this book testify to these historical events. Nonetheless, Rosen's work provides a great template and introduction to the field of public health. From its early beginnings in Egypt, Greece, Rome, and other centers of civilization in the ancient world, public health campaigns have bettered the lives of billions.
I found it especially interesting to survey the different attitudes towards public health and nationalized medicine in various countries. For example, Germany has viewed healthcare with a nationalistic lens dating back to the nineteenth century and the advent of German nationalism. The United States, however, has long been suspicious of such an organizational plan and has suffered inefficiencies due to its paranoia. Cuba has excellent healthcare efficiency. The UK, originally split along political lines about nationalized healthcare, has since viewed its National Health Service with a great deal of national pride. Perhaps there is hope for the United States to resolve its internal squabbles after all. show less
At the time of its first publication in 1958, this book filled an absolute vacuum. No other book on the history of public health was at once so comprehensive, so accessible and so informative. The 1993 edition is, for all intents and purposes, a reprint; but it also provides an excellent introduction by Elizabeth Fee that provides guidance to more recent work in the field, as well as a bibliography that offers an update to more specialized historical literature.
A history of public health from Classical Greece through the present...
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Statistics
- Works
- 10
- Members
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- 3.4
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