ebook img

Social Medicine and Medical Sociology in the Twentieth Century. PDF

216 Pages·1997·39.819 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Social Medicine and Medical Sociology in the Twentieth Century.

SOCIAL MEDICINE AND MEDICAL SOCIOLOGY IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY THE WELLCOME INSTITUTE SERIES IN THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE Forthcoming Titles Operative Chymist Anthony Morson Ashes to Ashes: The History of Smoking and Health Stephen Lock (ed.) Out of Otherness: Characters and Narrators in rhe Dutch Venereal Disease Debates 1850-1990 Annet Mooij Academic enquiries regarding the series should be addressed to the editors W F. Bynum, V. Nutton and Roy Porter at the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 183 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE, UK SOCIAL MEDICINE AND MEDICAL SOCIOLOGY IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Edited by Dorothy Porter Amsterdam - Atlanta, GA 1997 First published in 1997 by Editions Rodopi B. V., Amsterdam-Atlanta, GA 1997. © 1997 Dorothy Porter Design and typesetting by Christine Buckley, the Wellcome Trust. Printed and bound in The Netherlands by Editions Rodopi B. V., Amsterdam -Atlanta, GA 1997. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 90-420-0346-4 (Paper} ISBN 90-420-0356-1 (Bound) Porter, Dorothy Social Medicine and Medical Sociology in the Twentieth Century/Dorothy Porter, -Amsterdam-Atlanta, GA: Rodopi.-ill. (Clio Medica 43 I ISSN 0045-7183; The Wellcome Institute Series in the History of Medicine} Front cover: Still from cartoon "See How They Won", 1935. In 1935, Boots Pure Drug Company Ltd launched a Winter Health Campaign which focused for the first time on preventative healthcare, encouraging people to buy products such as throat pastilles, children's cough mixture, aspirin and cod liver oil to combat the inevitable winter coughs and colds. Central to the Campaign was a Hollywood-made cartoon "See How They Won" which was released in cinemas throughout the UK. It was supported by a promotional boardgame, gramophone record, and poster campaign as well as window bills and displays in over I 000 branches of Boots The Chemists. Details courtesy of The Boots Company Archive © Editions Rodopi B. V., Amsterdam -Atlanta, GA 1997 Printed in The Netherlands I dedicate this book to Alexander. Contents Introduction Dorothy Porter 1. Milton C. Winternitz and the Yale Institute of Human Relations: A Brief Chapter in the History of Social Medicine Arthur]. Vise/tear 32 2. Training Doctors for the National Health Service: Social Medicine, Medical Education and the GMC 1936-48 Nigel Oswald 59 3. Making Medicine Social: The Case of the Two Dogs with Bent Legs Ann Oakley 81 4. The Decline of Social Medicine in Britain in the 1960s Dorothy Porter 97 5. Social Medicine and Medical Sociology 1950-1970: The Testimony of a Partisan Participant Margot Jefferys 120 6. The Dilemma of Social Pathology Uta Gerhardt 137 7. The Social Space of Illness DavidArmstrong 165 8. Medicine, Diet and Moral Regulation: Foucault's Impact on Medical Sociology BryanS. Turner 175 Index 195 Introduction Dorothy Porter Virgin Territory? 'An exploration of the almost virgin territory which lay between the provinces of the medical and social sciences'1 The biometrician and geneticist Francis Crew believed this to be the central aim of the new academic discipline of social medicine founded in BTitain in the 1940s. Crew, Professor of Social Medicine at Edinburgh University, had first seen the potential role which the social sciences could play in medicine while he was a Chief M.O. in the services during World War II. Working in the armed forces allowed doctors a unique opportunity to make a study of positive health.2 'In the Army,' he argued, 'positive health is no empty phrase; for a purely negative health standard is not good enough for a medical service which is called upon to assess training procedures and to promote and prescribe a regimen appropriate to the maintenance of the highest level of attainable efficiency for an exacting life and an increasing variety of specialised activities imposed by mechanisation.'3 In the army the term positive health was given an exact meaning. Through various tests of intelligence, agility, endurance, strength, motivation etc. the army aimed to match each recruit to the most appropriate occupational role within the force. Crew explained that this constituted 'a measure of inherent and acquired qualities,' which prevented 'a disharmony between the individual and the conditions of his employment. In the Army as in Civil life much sickness is nothing more or less than disinclination born of dissatisfaction and transformed into disability.'4 He believed that the marriage of social science and medicine could achieve a similar social biology of health and human ecology for the civilian population too.5 1 Introduction Like the first Professor of Social Medicine in Britain, John Ryle, Crew linked medicine as a social science to political reform because both perceived the social sciences to be dedicated to social transformation.6 Their view was understandable because, from its inception, social science was bound to a prescriptive mission. The earliest attempts to develop a 'social mathematics' and 'social physics' of society were directed at reforming the political operation of power and restructuring of social relations. The reform impulse of early 'social physics' carried over into the first attempts to make medicine a social science in the mid-nineteenth century. Advocates of 'social medicine' at that time invented the physician as an attorney to the poor and encouraged him to take up his duty to participate in the political planning of society. The idea that social science could assist medicine to fulfil a political role in the planning of a future society extended into late-nineteenth-century investigations of social pathology which relied upon eugenics to improve population health. Some late-nineteenth-century public health theorists suggested that medicine should become involved in the corporate planning of communal life by turning itself into 'medicine from the social standpoint.' The idea of social medicine as a form of political and social engineering had a profound legacy for the relations of social science in medicine. Crew's view, therefore, that uniting the medical and the social sciences was crossing 'virgin territory' was rather myopic. Nineteenth-century experiments ln social medicine had already achieved that. Furthermore, nineteenth-century sociology was born out of a medical metaphor which compared the analysis of social order to the analysis of living organisms/ Sociology, like its social scientific predecessors, was wedded to reordering society but its prescriptive goals were derived from the organic analogy of society. The intellectual objective of the new 'positive' science of the social organism was to identify the laws which governed the harmonious functioning of its organs. Its method was to differentiate normal from pathological social states. The prescriptive nature of the organic analogy continued to have an equally profound influence on the development of the social science ofm edicine. Let us look for a moment at the political character of the early social sciences and examine the way in which this influenced their relations with medicine. We can begin with the translation of social physics into nineteenth-century political medical programmes. This will provide a background for understanding the mission of social science in medicine, or social medicine. An essential background for 2

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.