Medical History – January 2019 Issue Out Now
he new issue of Medical History (Volume 63 / Issue 1 January 2019) is out now. The issue features the following articles:
*Mobilising Mothers: The 1917 National Baby Week (Linda Bryder)
*Death of the King: The Introduction of Vaccination into Nepal in 1816 (Susan Heydon)
*In the Camp and on the March: Military Manuals as Sources for Studying Premodern Public Health (G. Geltner)
*‘If We Are to Believe the Psychologists …’: Medicine, Psychoanalysis and Breastfeeding in Britain, 1900–55 (Katharina Rowold)
*The Historical Face of Narcotic Revisited: A Chinese City’s Fifty-Year Quest for Hygienic Modernity, 1900–49 (Jianan Huang)
For more information see Medical History’s website at https://www.cambridge.org/ core/journals/medical-history/ latest-issue
*Mobilising Mothers: The 1917 National Baby Week (Linda Bryder)
*Death of the King: The Introduction of Vaccination into Nepal in 1816 (Susan Heydon)
*In the Camp and on the March: Military Manuals as Sources for Studying Premodern Public Health (G. Geltner)
*‘If We Are to Believe the Psychologists …’: Medicine, Psychoanalysis and Breastfeeding in Britain, 1900–55 (Katharina Rowold)
*The Historical Face of Narcotic Revisited: A Chinese City’s Fifty-Year Quest for Hygienic Modernity, 1900–49 (Jianan Huang)
For more information see Medical History’s website at https://www.cambridge.org/