ABSTRACT

The public health movement involved numerous individuals who made the case for change and put new practices into place. However despite a growing interest in how we understand history to inform current evidence-based practice, there is no book focusing on our progressive pioneers in public health and environmental health.

This book seeks to fill that gap. It examines carefully selected public and environmental health pioneers who made a real difference to the UK’s health, some with international influence. Many of these pioneers were criticised in their life-times, yet they had the strength of character to know what they were doing was fundamentally right and persevered, often against many odds. Including chapters on:

  • Thomas Fresh
  • John Snow
  • Duncan of Liverpool
  • Margaret McMillan
  • George Cadbury
  • Christopher Addison
  • Margery Spring Rice and others. 

This book will help readers place pioneers in a wider context and to make more sense of their academic and practitioner work today; how evidence (and what was historically understood by it) underpins modern day practice; and how these visionary pioneers developed their ideas into practice, some not fully appreciated until after their own deaths. Pioneers in Public Health sets the tone for a renewed focus on research into evidence-based public and environmental health, which has become subject of growing international interest in recent years.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|13 pages

Thomas Fresh

The first environmental health practitioner

chapter 3|9 pages

Sir John Simon

A role model for public health practice?

chapter 4|7 pages

John Snow

A pioneer in epidemiology

chapter 5|6 pages

Sir Joseph Bazalgette

A man of persistence and vision

chapter 6|10 pages

George Smith of Coalville (‘the Children’s Friend’)

Campaigner for factory and canal boats legislation

chapter 7|10 pages

Duncan of Liverpool

The first Medical Officer of Health

chapter 8|11 pages

Margaret McMillan

Advocate and practitioner of improvements in children’s health

chapter 9|9 pages

George Cadbury and corporate social responsibility

Working conditions, housing, education and food policy

chapter 10|10 pages

Charles Booth’s inquiry

Poverty, poor housing and legacies for environmental health

chapter 11|10 pages

Christopher Addison

Health visionary, man of war, Parliamentarian and practical pioneer

chapter 12|8 pages

Margery Spring Rice

Throwing light on hidden misery

chapter 13|9 pages

Berthold Lubetkin

‘Nothing is too good for ordinary people’

chapter 14|3 pages

Conclusions