Description
Book SynopsisA century of developing health culture in McLean County, Illinois
Trade ReviewReceived a Superior Achievement Award from the Illinois State Historical Society, 2009.
"An interesting portrait of the shift from rural and traditional nineteenth-century medical care to modernized, scientific, professional medical care and public health rules and regulations as seen from the perspectives of doctors, nurses, patients, and other community members."The Journal of American History
“Beier has contributed substantially to a new understanding of biomedicine in the twentieth century Midwest and in the United States.”--Journal of Illinois History
“Well-written and smoothly flowing. . . . Anyone interested in how changes in life, death, and expectations about health care evolve over a century would be remiss if they did not read, and enjoy, this book.”--Annals of Iowa
“This is a must book for those with interests in family, cultural, social, gender, ethnic, and medical history. . . . Highly recommended.”--
Choice"A superb model of analytical local history and of social history."--
American Historical Review“An informative, original, and important book. Beier’s well-written and thoroughly researched work seeks to reconcile a broader historiography with the experiences of the people who lived through a period of profound change in McLean County, Illinois.”--Timothy A. Hickman, author of
The Secret Leprosy of Modern Days: Narcotic Addiction and Cultural Crisis in the United States, 1870-1920“Lucinda Beier’s command and deep use of local sources puts a very human face on medicine as it was experienced. Her ability to probe the memory of informants and her understanding of national medical trends help us understand how people of the past suffered, healed, or died. This on-the-ground history serves as a fine example of the value of such local sources to cultural historians.”--Greg Koos, executive director, McLean County Museum of History
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments viii
Introduction: A Matter of Life and Death ix
1. Living and Dying in Nineteenth-Century McLean County 1
2. No Place Like Home: Hospitals and the Development of Institutional Care 22
3. Nursing, Gender, and Modern Medicine 44
4. Doctors and Organized Medicine 73
5. An Ounce of Prevention: Public Health Services 117
6. Matters of Life and Death: Experience and Expectations of Health, Illness, and Medical Care in the Twentieth Century 136
Conclusion: Health Culture in Transition 179
Appendix: Oral History Informants 191
Notes 195
Bibliography 223
Index 233
Illustrations follow page 116