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Health and medicine in Britain since 1860

Part of the Social history in perspective series
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Since 1860, life expectancies and standards of general health have improved dramatically in industrialized societies.

In the 1860s, there was little that medicine could do to cure or prevent illness, death rates were high and life expectancy short.

This work sets out to examine the relationship between health and medicine and how it has changed in Britain over a period of 150 years.

From the placebo effect and Viagra, through changes in society and in the organization, practice and expertise of medicine, it reviews the processes through which modern expectations of health have become established.

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Product Details
Red Globe Press
0333600118 / 9780333600115
Paperback / softback
06/12/2000
United Kingdom
English
xi, 220p.
22 cm
advanced secondary /general /undergraduate Learn More
ANNE HARDY is a Lecturer in the History of Modern Medicine at the Wellcome Centre for the History of Medicine, University College London.
ANNE HARDY is a Lecturer in the History of Modern Medicine at the Wellcome Centre for the History of Medicine, University College London. 1DBK United Kingdom, Great Britain, 3JH c 1800 to c 1900, 3JJ 20th century, HBTB Social & cultural history, MBP Health systems & services, MBX History of medicine