Version 2.5.2.0 CRISP Logo CRISP Homepage Help for CRISP Email Us

Abstract

Grant Number: 5G13LM009159-02
Project Title: The Contemporary History of Public Health in New York City
PI Information:NameEmailTitle
COLGROVE, JAMES jc988@columbia.edu

Abstract: DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The purpose of this book is to document and analyze the public health challenges, successes and controversies in New York City since the 1960s. Drawing on archival research and oral history interviews, I will map the contested terrain of municipal public health and examine the ways that health professionals, government agencies, civil society institutions, activists, and other stakeholders have responded to the city's health needs during a time of rapid and intense social and political change. The book that will be based on this research will offer both a dramatic narrative and analysis of the political, legal, and ethical issues at the core of public health practice. , The specific aims of this study and the resulting book are: To describe the most significant public health issues in New York City over the past four decades and the institutional and public responses to them. To explicate the social and political processes by which public health policies and practices in New York City have been created, implemented, and contested. To analyze how historically contingent forces, including changing political and economic climates and the actions of particular individuals, have produced public health successes and failures. To use the experiences of New York City as a lens for understanding the broad challenges facing urban public health in the United States. The central argument of the book is that internal and external pressures propelled the field of urban public health into an extended period of crisis in the 1960s. Shifting epidemiological patterns, increased federal expenditures on curative medical technologies, the rise of patient and consumer activism, and the economic retrenchment of cities have all profoundly influenced the practice of public health. These changes are crystallized in the contemporary history of public health in New York City. Building upon a substantial body of already completed research into the history of the New York City Department of Health, I will conduct oral history interviews and investigate archival materials of the health department, community-based organizations, and other government agencies. The history documented in this book will provide insights into conceptual and practical questions about the mission of the public health profession, the causes and consequences of illness among urban populations, and the role of the government in guarding the common welfare.

Public Health Relevance:
This Public Health Relevance is not available.

Thesaurus Terms:
public health, urban area
Bangladesh, British Isles, Yersinia pestis disease, active immunization, archive, attention, base, book, child care, chronic disease /disorder, climate, communicable disease, communicable disease transmission, community, conditioning, conflict, culture, disease /disorder prevention /control, emotion, employee, environment, environmental protection, epidemiology, ethics, experience, face, health, health care, health care policy, health education, heart, heroin, homeless, hospital, human, human migration, immunity, insight, interview, isolation /deprivation, journal, lead, lead poisoning, lens, library, material, medicine, methadone, model, motivation, nurse, nursing, obesity, physician, politics, public health nursing, publication, role, root, sectioning, social behavior disorder, social group process, social integration, social problem, sociology /anthropology, success, therapy, tobacco, training, tuberculosis, university, violence, vision
clinical research

Institution: COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
Columbia University Medical Center
NEW YORK, NY 100323702
Fiscal Year: 2007
Department: SOCIOMEDICAL SCIENCES
Project Start: 01-JUN-2006
Project End: 31-MAY-2009
ICD: NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE
IRG: ZLM1


CRISP Homepage Help for CRISP Email Us