Health and Humanity: A History of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 1935–1985

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JHU Press, 2016 - Education - 504 pages

The mid-twentieth-century evolution of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.

Between 1935 and 1985, the nascent public health profession developed scientific evidence and practical know-how to prevent death on an unprecedented scale. Thanks to public health workers, life expectancy rose rapidly as generations grew up free from the scourges of smallpox, typhoid, and syphilis. In Health and Humanity, Karen Kruse Thomas offers a thorough account of the growth of academic public health in the United States through the prism of the oldest and largest independent school of public health in the world. Thomas follows the transformation of the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health (JHSPH), now known as the Bloomberg School of Public Health, from a small, private institute devoted to doctoral training and tropical disease research into a leading global educator and innovator in fields from biostatistics to mental health to pathobiology.

A provocative, wide-ranging account of how midcentury public health leveraged federal grants and anti-Communist fears to build the powerful institutional networks behind the health programs of the CDC, WHO, and USAID, the book traces how Johns Hopkins helped public health take center stage during the scientific research boom triggered by World War II. It also examines the influence of politics on JHSPH, the school’s transition to federal grant funding, the globalization of public health in response to hot and cold war influences, and the expansion of the school’s teaching program to encompass social science as well as lab science.

Revealing how faculty members urged foreign policy makers to include saving lives in their strategy of “winning hearts and minds,” Thomas argues that the growth of chronic disease and the loss of Rockefeller funds moved the JHSPH toward international research funded by the federal government, creating a situation in which it was sometimes easier for the school to improve the health of populations in India and Turkey than on its own doorstep in East Baltimore. Health and Humanity is a comprehensive account of the ways that JHSPH has influenced the practice, pedagogy, and especially our very understanding of public health on both global and local scales.

 

Contents

Prologue
1
1 The Southern Roots of Public Health at Johns Hopkins
20
2 School at War
52
3 Postwar Public Health Science
76
4 The School and the City
109
5 Rethinking the Public Health Curriculum
145
6 The Postwar Geopolitics of American Public Health
161
7 Missionaries and Mercenaries
187
10 The Environmental Revolution in Public Health
288
11 Chronic Disease Epidemiology
319
12 Federal Funding and Its Discontents
340
13 Days of Reckoning and Renewal
361
Epilogue
392
Appendix A JHSPH Leadership and Budgets
399
Appendix B Publications from Research on the Eastern Health District of Baltimore
402
Notes
405

Illustrations
229
8 The Social Sciences Urban Health and the Great Society
229
9 Surviving the Seventies
258

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About the author (2016)

Karen Kruse Thomas is the staff historian of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She is the author of Deluxe Jim Crow: Civil Rights and American Health Policy, 1935–1954.

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