Segment from
Body Politics
The Health of a Nation
Political scientist Jacob Hacker, author of the “public plan,” uses history to explain how we wound up with a system so different from the European model, and why lobbyists hold so much sway over health policy.
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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