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Living Shadow Death Tuberculosis

Living Shadow Death Tuberculosis

Paperback

Medical ReferenceGeneral United States HistoryGeneral World History

ISBN10: 0801851866
ISBN13: 9780801851865
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Published: Oct 1 1995
Pages: 332
Weight: 1.10
Height: 1.00 Width: 6.12 Depth: 9.20
Language: English

Tuberculosis--once the cause of as many as one in five deaths in the U.S.--crossed all boundaries of class and gender, but the methods of treatment for men and women differed radically. While men were encouraged to go out to sea or to the open country, women were expected to stay at home, surrounded by family, to anticipate a lingering death. Several women, however, chose rather to head for the drier climates of the West and build new lives on their own. But with the discovery of the tubercle bacillus in 1882 and the establishment of sanatoriums, both men and women were relegated to lives of seclusion, sacrificing autonomy for the prospect of a cure.

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Medical Reference