Infant mortality and social causality: Lessons from the history of Britain’s public health movement, c. 1834–1914
Elias Nosrati,
Michael P. Kelly,
Simon Szreter
Abstract:What are the historical conditions under which a sociologically informed understanding of health inequality can emerge in the public sphere? We seek to address this question through the lens of a strategically chosen historical puzzle—the stubborn persistence of and salient variation in high infant mortality rates across British industrial towns at the dawn of the previous century—as analysed by Arthur Newsholme, the Medical Officer of the Local Government Board. In doing so, we retrace the historical processe… Show more
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