BMJ 1994;308:994-995 (16 April)
Editorials
New public health and old rhetoric
There is a discipline in medicine that over the past 200 years has been known by various names: sanitary medicine, public hygiene, public health, social medicine, and community medicine. Its newest incarnation proudly calls itself "the new public health."1
Academically the discipline was buried repeatedly because it produced "mere rhetoric."2,3 The first time this happened was before the turn of the 19th century. The successful hygienic and sanitarian movement of the middle of that century divorced itself from bacteriology, the upcoming science of the 1880s, because bacteriology could not really explain why epidemics happened at certain places and certain times and to certain people. The members of the movement had a point, in retrospect, but their adamant opposition to the new science led to their academic downfall and even ridicule. Hygienism was seen as only "soft" rhetoric, while "hard" bacteriological science would give the real explanations. Nobody had proved hygienists . . . [Full text of this article]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati What's this?
Relevant Articles
-
New public health Don't judge the rest on the rhetoric of new public health
- J L Gunning-Schepers, K McPherson, and G R de Wildt
BMJ 1994 309: 55.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
New public health Research is part of the political process
- N Bruce, P Flynn, J Hotchkiss, J Springett, A S Samuel, N Mays, and J Connelly
BMJ 1994 308: 1568-1569.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Bond, L., Glover, S., Godfrey, C., Butler, H., Patton, G. C.
(2001). Building Capacity for System-Level Change in Schools: Lessons from the Gatehouse Project. Health Educ Behav
28: 368-383
[Abstract]
-
Higgins, P.
(1996). The nursing profession - a changing role in a changing world. The Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health
116: 51-56
-
Thompson, E
(1994). The woman on the kerb. BMJ
309: 141-142
[Full text]
-
Gunning-Schepers, J L, McPherson, K, de Wildt, G R
(1994). New public health Don't judge the rest on the rhetoric of new public health. BMJ
309: 55a-55
[Full text]
-
Bruce, N, Flynn, P, Hotchkiss, J, Springett, J, Samuel, A S, Mays, N, Connelly, J
(1994). New public health Research is part of the political process. BMJ
308: 1568-1569
[Full text]