Just Finished Reading: Public Health – A Very Short Introduction by Virginia Berridge (FP: 2016)
…and finally – one further step up to Public Health. Public
Health has meant many things to many people over the centuries – from sanitation
to vaccination to sexual health to life-style choices to improving things like
diet and combatting smoking (and illegal drug use). But the health of the
general population hasn’t always been the focus of the State or other institutions
either private or philanthropic. Before the Industrial Revolution (and into the
beginnings of that particular cultural and economic upheaval) the general
health was considered as either irrelevant or simply too complex and expensive.
Only with the coming of the factory and the consequent crowding together of
thousands of poorly fed and poorly served workers did the idea of Public Health
even enter the minds of people who could do something about it. With plague a
thing of the past the urban populations had to deal with things like Cholera
and Typhoid instead (to say nothing of Smallpox and Measles) which could spread
to the more wealthy areas and their inhabitants. Such efforts to combat disease
and improve the general health were not completely selfish (or humanitarian)
and improve they did – first with improvements in sanitation, housing codes,
reductions in working hours, improvements in food distribution. Not all of this
was the concern of Public Health officials but, over time, they had more and
more influence and more and more power to make improvements, suggestions and
policy recommendations. As other countries followed suite (the main focus of
most of this slim volume was on the UK experience with minor forays into the
European and American experience) the remit changed, expanded and mutated as
earlier problems were solved, new problems arose (like HIV/AIDS) and
definitions of Public Health changed or expanded. After 1945 Public Health developed
a more global perspective led by organisations like the WHO who, somewhat
naively, expected to eliminate the great global killers like Malaria by the end
of the 1970’s. Only Smallpox fell to the WHO programme and since then more
realistic approaches and aspirations have taken the place of total elimination.
Where Public Health goes in the future depends, as does much else, on the will
to do things for the general wellbeing of all.
This was the last book in the VSI Pandemic book blitz.
Whilst it wasn’t as interesting as some of the others it did offer another
perspective on health issues and the importance – as we all now realise – of Public
Health organisations and mind-sets in fighting, controlling or simply
mitigating health issues that apply to everyone (like Pandemics!). Not
surprisingly countries with robust Public Health policies and practices generally
do better in any health crisis than countries who do not. Public Health is
important and should be, at least in my opinion, a central part of any advanced
society. A State should seek to look after its citizens in the best way that it
can for a whole host of reasons. An adequately funded and resourced Public
Health system is a very good place to start. Reasonable.
We’re now back to normal for a while until the mood takes me
into another Blitz read. I already have the next one lined up and two more
after that in the pipeline. But I’ll be moving away from science based VSI for
a while if only to rest my brain for a bit.
6 comments:
I imagine public health became more important around the turn of the century (the last one, I mean...XD) not so much to help workers, but because urbanization was increasing -- and with it, the potency of diseases, especially considering the conditions in the most congested places.
@ Stephen: Most definitely. Pack people together with poor sanitation is ASKING for trouble. They did learn a lot about disease spread & vectors and stuff though!!
although i admit to some surprise that the institution of Public Health ever got started at all... given the human tendency to ignore unpleasant or expensive alterations of any sort...
@ Mudpuddle: I think it was a mix of having to plus a dash of human decency.... It does exist - its just the amount and location that fluctuates...
Good on you for finishing this series.
@ Judy: Thanks. The VSI books are good for blitzes. I already have the next one (and potentially two after that) lined up... [grin] It's also a great way of breaking into new subjects or refreshing/expanding what you already know - and they always come with a bibliography.
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