Literature DB >> 10076494

Skirting the issue: women and international health in historical perspective.

A E Birn1.   

Abstract

Over the last decades women have become central to international health efforts, but most international health agencies continue to focus narrowly on the maternal and reproductive aspects of women's health. This article explores the origins of this paradigm as demonstrated in the emergence of women's health in the Rockefeller Foundation's public health programs in Mexico in the 1920s and 1930s. These efforts bore a significant reproductive imprint; women dispensed and received services oriented to maternal and childbearing roles. Women's health and social advocacy movements in Mexico and the United States partially shaped this interest. Even more important, the emphasis on women in the Rockefeller programs proved an expedient approach to the Foundation's underlying goals: promoting bacteriologically based public health to the government, medical personnel, business interests, and peasants; helping legitimize the Mexican state; and transforming Mexico into a good political and commercial neighbor. The article concludes by showing the limits to the maternal and reproductive health model currently advocated by most donor agencies, which continue to skirt--or sidestep--major concerns that are integral to the health of women.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10076494      PMCID: PMC1508602          DOI: 10.2105/ajph.89.3.399

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  12 in total

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Authors:  M O West
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2.  Bringing care to the people: Lillian Wald's legacy to public health nursing.

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Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1993-12       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 3.  Gender and equity in health sector reform programmes: a review.

Authors:  H Standing
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4.  The American midwife controversy: a crisis of professsionalization.

Authors:  F E Kobrin
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5.  More than mothers and whores: redefining the AIDS prevention needs of women.

Authors:  K Carovano
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  1991       Impact factor: 1.663

6.  Transformative combinations: women's health and human rights.

Authors:  A E Yamin
Journal:  J Am Med Womens Assoc (1972)       Date:  1997

Review 7.  Man-made medicine and women's health: the biopolitics of sex/gender and race/ethnicity.

Authors:  N Krieger; E Fee
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 1.663

Review 8.  Women, household and health in Latin America.

Authors:  C H Browner
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 4.634

9.  Invisible labours: mill work and motherhood in the American South.

Authors:  P E Hill
Journal:  Soc Hist Med       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 0.973

10.  The Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine: institutionalizing medical research in the periphery.

Authors:  H Power
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  1996-04       Impact factor: 1.419

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  3 in total

1.  Technology assessment and accountable health services for women.

Authors:  C Muller; M C Fahs
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Social medicine then and now: lessons from Latin America.

Authors:  H Waitzkin; C Iriart; A Estrada; S Lamadrid
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  The politics of unsafe abortion in Burkina Faso: the interface of local norms and global public health practice.

Authors:  Katerini T Storeng; Fatoumata Ouattara
Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2014-08-18
  3 in total

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