Peripheral Nerve 2020
DOI: 10.1215/9781478012221-001
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Alternative Destinies and Solidarities for Health and Medicine in Latin America Before and During the Cold War

Abstract: In May 1944, Emilio Frugoni, a poet, professor, former senator, and founder of the Uruguayan Socialist Party, arrived in Moscow as Uruguay's first ambassador to the Soviet Union in eight years. 1 Frugoni was accompanied by his personal secretary as well as a scientific attaché, Dr. Lauro Cruz Goyenola, an active member of the Frente Popu lar (Popu lar Front) co ali tion and contributor to the pro-Soviet Diario Popu lar. In addition to serving as the aging Frugoni's personal physician, Cruz Goyenola was charged… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 315 publications
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“…It would be a mistake to assume that peoples targeted by the organizations described above passively accepted interventions from either west or east. In interwar Latin America, for example, recent work suggests that Mexican health administrators selectively adopted lessons from the Soviet Union even as Rockefeller Foundation programs sought to impose American models (Birn, 2020, pp. 12–14).…”
Section: The Rise Of Social Medicine In the Interwar Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It would be a mistake to assume that peoples targeted by the organizations described above passively accepted interventions from either west or east. In interwar Latin America, for example, recent work suggests that Mexican health administrators selectively adopted lessons from the Soviet Union even as Rockefeller Foundation programs sought to impose American models (Birn, 2020, pp. 12–14).…”
Section: The Rise Of Social Medicine In the Interwar Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%