Medicine in Wales c.1800-2000: Public Service or Private Commodity
By (Author) Peter Borsay
University of Wales Press
University of Wales Press
31st October 2003
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Health systems and services
History: specific events and topics
Politics and government
362.109429
Hardback
304
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
At a time when the proper role of the state is under constant review, its relationship to the private sphere is a matter of considerable public concern. Medicine in Wales, c.1800-2000 places this debate in historical context. Research-based case studies explore themes that range from the water supply to suicide, from mutual aid to industrial rehabilitation and the medical inspection of school children, and from nursing during the First World War to experiences of childbirth and health visiting after 1945. A concluding chapter assesses why medicine has failed to deliver the equitable outcomes that were promised with the creation of the National Health Service. Throughout the book, particular attention is paid to the partnership between the state, scientific knowledge, and professional expertise, and to its implications for the producers and consumers of healthcare in terms of class and citizenship, family, gender and community, and the urban/rural contrasts within Welsh national identity.
' This is a scholarly book which is bound to appeal to everyone who is interested in the history of medicine in Wales.' (Planet) 'This is an excellent book, academically sound and coherent in it's analysis of the tension between the public and the private...'New Welsh Review '...[a] very valuable collection...[which contains] excellent material which is well presented.' History
Anne Borsay is Professor of Healthcare and Medical Humanities at the University of Wales Swansea.