Public health nihilism vs pragmatism: history, politics, and the control of tuberculosis.
A L Fairchild and
G M Oppenheimer
Program in the History of Public Health and Medicine, Columbia School of Public Health, New York City, NY 10032-2625, USA. alf4@columbia.edu
Tuberculosis (TB) began to decline in the Western world in themid- to late 1800s. In the United States, the disease recededuntil the mid-1980s, when that trend was reversed. Althoughthe TB epidemic in the United States subsided in response topublic health interventions, it sparked a controversy regardingthe relative value of targeted public health measures vs broadsocial reform. That controversy, which echoed earlier debatescalling for structural reform over public health programs, wasfurther strengthened by the historical and demographic studiesof Thomas McKeown. His influential thesis maintains that clinicaland primary prevention efforts had little effect on TB mortality.In this paper, the historical literature is used to examinewhether public health had a significant impact on the declineof TB mortality rates in several countries. Specifically, thepaper describes the arguments for and data affirming the efficacyof 2 major public health interventions over time: segregationof those infected with pulmonary TB and eradication of bovineTB. This review finds support for the hypothesis that publichealth measures, along with other factors, led to falling ratesof TB mortality beginning in the late 19th century.
Related articles in AJPH:
Nihilism and pragmatism in tuberculosis control.
P Farmer and E Nardell
AJPH 1998 88: 1014-1015.
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