Literature DB >> 7762726

Could you starve to death in England in 1839? The Chadwick-Farr controversy and the loss of the "social" in public health.

C Hamlin1.   

Abstract

The public health field has long been pulled in two directions, either toward a narrower biomedical mission to control infectious disease or toward a broader mission to address the social and economic factors that adversely affect health and wellbeing. This paper explores as an instance of this tension an 1839 controversy between the statistician William Farr and the pioneering sanitary reformer Edwin Chadwick on the role of starvation as a cause of death. Farr thought hunger contribution significantly to many deaths; Chadwick wanted Farr to concentrate on the diseases from which people actually died. The paper then considers what the "constitutional" disease theories, which underlay Farr's concerns, implied for public health using medical testimony on child labor in industrial revolution factories as an illustration. An exploration of this constitutional medicine may help provide a "useable past" for modern public health workers interested in broadening the scope of public health.

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Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7762726      PMCID: PMC1615507          DOI: 10.2105/ajph.85.6.856

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


  7 in total

1.  From foetid air to filth: the cultural transformation of British epidemiological thought, ca. 1780-1848.

Authors:  Michael Brown
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.314

2.  An unsuitable and degraded diet? Part one: public health lessons from the mid-Victorian working class diet.

Authors:  Paul Clayton; Judith Rowbotham
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 5.344

3.  A vision of social justice as the foundation of public health: commemorating 150 years of the spirit of 1848.

Authors:  N Krieger; A E Birn
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1998-11       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Revolutions in public health: 1848, and 1998?

Authors:  C Hamlin; S Sheard
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1998-08-29

5.  Millennium report to Sir Edwin Chadwick.

Authors:  I Sram; J Ashton
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1998-08-29

Review 6.  Causal inference in public health.

Authors:  Thomas A Glass; Steven N Goodman; Miguel A Hernán; Jonathan M Samet
Journal:  Annu Rev Public Health       Date:  2013-01-07       Impact factor: 21.981

Review 7.  An argument for renewed focus on epidemiology for public health.

Authors:  Elizabeth T Rogawski; Christine L Gray; Charles Poole
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2016-08-31       Impact factor: 3.797

  7 in total

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