Quinine and Quarantine Quinine and Quarantine
MISSOURI HERITAGE READERS

Quinine and Quarantine

Missouri Medicine through the Years

    • 11,99 €
    • 11,99 €

Publisher Description

Presenting a fascinating overview of medicine in Missouri from the early days of epidemics to present-day technological advances, Quinine and Quarantine approaches the history of medicine as an integral part of the state’s development.

Examining the changing environmental risks and diseases that threatened Missouri over the years and the role of the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers as prime routes for the spread of diseases and innovations, Loren Humphrey discusses the efforts of citizens, legislators, and health officials confronting various medical challenges. He offers intriguing medical details of the past two centuries interspersed with the stories of significant historical figures and Missourians’ personal accounts. He tells of the pioneers’ struggles to use natural remedies acquired from Native Americans, the gory and unsanitary attempts to treat early gunshot wounds, and the common afflictions and diseases such as “swamp fever,” measles, mumps, consumption, dysentery, smallpox, and typhoid that seemed beyond medicine’s effects. Humphrey also discusses the significance of the discovery and reluctant acceptance of the “antifever” breakthrough now famous as quinine, as well as the lessons learned as a result of Civil War medical techniques.

Quinine and Quarantine takes readers on a remarkable journey that concludes in the present, arguably the most exciting and controversial era for medical advances. Humphrey explores new imaging techniques, laparoscopic surgery, and research on ways to overcome bacterial resistance to antibiotics. He challenges the reader to consider such compelling issues as the escalating cost of health care and the threats posed by environmental hazards. He also identifies topics over which Missourians will likely struggle well into the next century, such as transplants, managed care, abortion, and assisted suicide.

Organized chronologically in fifty-year segments and written in language free of jargon, Quinine and Quarantine offers readers a broad historical view of the medical problems and solutions faced by the people of Missouri, preparing them to cope with medical issues of the new millennium.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2000
5 April
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
144
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Missouri Press
SIZE
13.7
MB

Other Books in This Series

M. Jeff Thompson M. Jeff Thompson
2007
Hoecakes, Hambone, and All That Jazz Hoecakes, Hambone, and All That Jazz
2003
George Caleb Bingham George Caleb Bingham
2005
Arrow Rock Arrow Rock
2005
The Ioway in Missouri The Ioway in Missouri
2008
Jessie Benton Frémont Jessie Benton Frémont
2005