Segment from
Body Politics
Health Care in the New World
Reporter Catherine Moore visits Virginia’s Mt. Malado, the first hospital in the New World, and finds out why the “public plan” in the Virginia colony may have had its drawbacks.
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Further Reading
All Centuries
- Primary sources on women in the medical field, including letters, diaries, photos, and oral histories
- Dozens of historians weigh in on the health care debate
18th Century
- An early example of nationalized health care: merchant marine hospitals.
- Pamphlet by a Boston minister arguing the merits of smallpox inoculation (1721)
- Medical classics from the Jeffersonian era
19th Century
- “Directions for Preserving the Health of Soldiers,” by Benjamin Rush (1808)
- “Mortality Among Negroes in the Cities,” a report from an Atlanta conference (1896)
- Letters from an early 19th century Virginia doctor
20th Century & Beyond
- Timeline of health reform history
- Origins of Medicare’s current troubles
- Interview with historian Paul Starr on health reform’s major defeats
- Op-Ed urging president Obama to channel Truman.
- “Historian’s Take” on the roots of the current health care debate
American Presidents on health care:
Cited
- Photos of the recreated 17th century hospital at Mt. Malado: 1, 2, 3
- “The Memory Palace,” Nate DiMeo’s podcast about American history