American Decades
Sex, Disease, And The New Deal
The Conquest of Infectious Disease.
The most important health change during the century was the successful conquest of many infectious diseases through both public health measures and scientific medical advances. Diphtheria, typhoid, and dysentery no longer threatened Americans with terrible epidemics, yet venereal diseases remained uncontrolled. Modern antibiotic treatments for them were not available in the 1930s; but control was also defeated by a conspiracy of silence that prevailed in the country over issues of sexual morality. During World War I, newspapers and magazines dramatically publicized the problem, but in the years after the war the antivenereal campaign began to fail. If all conditions due to syphilis had been reported as such, it was believed that syphilis would have been found to be the leading cause of death in the United States. It was responsible for 10 percent of all insanity, 18 percent of all diseases of the...
[The entire page is 1160 words long]
1930's Medicine and Health
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Birth Control
- The Blues Blue Cross And Blue Shield
- The Cost Of Being Sick
- The Dawn Of The Sulfa Drugs
- The Food, Drug, And Cosmetic Act Of 1938
- The "Good Sleep"—A Ne W Era In Surgery
- "The Great White Plague"—Tuberculosis Before The Age Of Antibiotics
- Health And The New Deal
- The March Of Dimes And The National Foundation For Infantile Paralysis
- Maternal Mortality—Why Mothers Died
- The Nation'S Health
- The New Deal, Health Insurance, And The Ama
- Psychoanalysis In America And The Impact Of The European Intellectual Migration
- Sex, Disease, And The New Deal
- Specialization Versus General Practice
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1930–1939
