Literature DB >> 7702129

Go tell it on the mountain: Hilla Sheriff and public health in the South Carolina Piedmont, 1929 to 1940.

P E Hill1.   

Abstract

As director of the South Carolina units of the American Women's Hospitals and as the state's first female county health official, Hilla Sheriff combined elements of the Progressive Era's social gospel; the New Deal notion that concerned, public-spirited officials could make a difference; and a nascent feminism that led her into the controversial fields of family planning and nutrition. Sheriff's responses to endemic pellagra, innovative maternal and child health campaigns, and contraceptive research for the Milbank Memorial Fund attracted national attention and spawned programs based on her models throughout the South. Her ability to tailor programs to diverse communities--mothers who bore double burdens as textile workers, isolated farm families, mountaineers, and African Americans denied access to most health care facilities in the Jim Crow South--serves as a timeless example for those committed to community medicine.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7702129      PMCID: PMC1615107          DOI: 10.2105/ajph.85.4.578

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


  3 in total

1.  Statistics of Pericarditis with Effusion, from the London Hospitals: (St. Thomas's).

Authors:  C R Box; G G Butler
Journal:  Proc R Soc Med       Date:  1910

2.  L. Rosa Gantt, M.D. (1875-1935).

Authors:  T M Leland
Journal:  J S C Med Assoc       Date:  1987-11

3.  Science and social reform: women in public health.

Authors:  E Fee; B Greene
Journal:  J Public Health Policy       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 2.222

  3 in total

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