Children's health and urban ecology in England, 1885-1919 / Jim Harris.
2025
RJ101
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Unlimited
Access notes
DRM-Free
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Details
Title
Children's health and urban ecology in England, 1885-1919 / Jim Harris.
ISBN
9781805437314 (electronic bk.)
1805437313 (electronic bk.)
9781805437307 (electronic bk.)
1805437305 (electronic bk.)
9781648251016 (hardback)
9781648251009 (paperback)
1805437313 (electronic bk.)
9781805437307 (electronic bk.)
1805437305 (electronic bk.)
9781648251016 (hardback)
9781648251009 (paperback)
Published
Rochester, NY : University of Rochester Press, [2025]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource.
Call Number
RJ101
Dewey Decimal Classification
362.19892000942
Summary
"Analyzes public health efforts to reduce infant mortality and improve children's health in three large English cities: Birmingham, Liverpool, and Manchester. While English public health efforts had reduced the threat of infectious diseases and improved sanitation by the end of the Victorian era, soaring infant mortality rates brought children's health to the forefront of public health concerns. Efforts to understand the causes of infant mortality and improve children's survival required attention to the environments where infant mortality was often highest, i.e., in the cities. Children's Health and Urban Ecology in England, 1885-1919 examines the history of urban public health campaigns in three of the largest English cities, Birmingham, Liverpool, and Manchester. It considers how local environments impacted children's health by creating ecological conditions ripe for the spread of disease, as well as opportunities for improvements and interventions. Between 1885 and 1919, English public health leaders began to establish increasingly localized approaches to public health that included interventions in households and at schools. This work was conducted by new types of public health professionals, including health visitors to new mothers and school medical officers. While these programs emerged from local environmental conditions, two imperial military conflicts (the Second Anglo-Boer War and the First World War) drew national attention to the importance of children's health. In examining the effects of these conflicts as well as the urgent response to local environmental conditions, Children's Health and Urban Ecology highlights how the epicenter of public health shifted from cities to the state by the end of the First World War"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
Series
Rochester studies in medical history. 1526-2715
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Table of Contents
A Tale of Three Cities : Ecology and Demography
Flies and Feces : Death from Diarrhea
On Matters of Milk and Motherhood : Promoting Public Health in the Private Sphere
Cantlie's Crisis Revisited : From the South African War to 1904
Expanding Children's Health : Schools as Sites of Public Health
New Directions for Children's Health : The First World War and Its Aftermath
The Birth of the Ministry of Health.
Flies and Feces : Death from Diarrhea
On Matters of Milk and Motherhood : Promoting Public Health in the Private Sphere
Cantlie's Crisis Revisited : From the South African War to 1904
Expanding Children's Health : Schools as Sites of Public Health
New Directions for Children's Health : The First World War and Its Aftermath
The Birth of the Ministry of Health.