[Social diseases in the interwar period in the Lwów Province]

Małgorzata Marcysiak

Journal Article: Medycyna nowozytna: studia nad historia medycyny / Polska Akademia Nauk, Instytut Historii Nauki 02/2007; 14(1-2):99-136.

Abstract

The health state of Polish society in the interwar period was unsatisfactory. In particular, the danger was posed by social diseases, understood to be serious diseases of prolonged type, widespread among people. The diseases included: tuberculosis, trachoma, venereal diseases, infancy diseases causing a large scale infant mortality, excessive mortality among mothers in the peripartum (around birth) period, alcoholism, mental diseases, goiter, cancers, and occupational diseases. Because of the character of the social diseases, fighting them was long, and the interactions aimed not only at the ill ones, but also at their environment. The main role in this process was played by social ambulatories, whose chief task was prophylaxis. The actions differed depending on individual diseases. The personnel consisted of doctors, social nurses, school hygienists, sanitary supervisors, and social keepers. There were undertaken coordinated actions, supported by the state, provincial and district self-governments, and social organizations. Regulations governing the fight against social diseases were created. They mainly applied to organizing institutions and obligatory registration of diseases. Thanks to cyclically growing number of institutions, personnel trainings and sanctioning of the fight against social diseases, the epidemiologic situation improved noticeably towards the end of the period.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

chief task
 
district self-governments
 
excessive mortality
 
health state
 
ill ones
 
individual diseases
 
infancy diseases
 
interwar period
 
large scale infant mortality
 
mental diseases
 
obligatory registration
 
occupational diseases
 
personnel trainings
 
Polish society
 
serious diseases
 
social ambulatories
 
social diseases
 
social keepers
 
social organizations
 
venereal diseases