Medical mapping is broadly assumed to have been a nineteenth century reaction both to the appearance of cholera and the social consciousness of principally British reformers. It is however older, more embedded in the scientific enterprise than the social critique, and in the end, more central to both than researchers typically recognize. This paper argues that medical mapping was from its start in the late 1600s principally a tool for the self-conscious testing of spatial propositions, arguing a relationship between health and place, and between the locus of specific disease incidence and suspected sites of local infectious generation. Through the nineteenth century the resulting work--social and medical— typically advanced a miasmatic theo...
Soils have a profound impact on the causation and geographical distribution of human disease and wel...
The last half century has witnessed two landmark events in medical history. The 1970s saw euphoria a...
Research leading to this article was funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant under the ...
Medical geography is a small sub-discipline of academic geography. Its presence within histories of...
Analysing geographically-related disease data This issue of Statistical Methods in Medical Research ...
In 1854, Dr. John Snow identified the Broad Street pump as the source of an intense cholera outbreak...
In the mid-1800s, London physician John Snow made a startling observation that would change the way ...
Medical geography begins with sickness and health. The policies addressing disease, and the causes ...
By mapping the incidence of cholera deaths, Dr. John Snow was able to trace the spread of Cholera in...
The conceptual and methodological framework of modern medical geography began in 1950s with the publ...
John Snow’s investigation of cholera in 1850s London used analysis techniques that would now likely ...
The primary aim of this review was to evaluate the state of knowledge of the geographical distributi...
The article explores how Victorian visual culture was a vital force in the construction and dissemin...
Place. Area. Neighborhood. Latitude. Longitude. Distance. These geographic terms are increasingly fi...
In the mid-1800s, London was undergoing rapid urbanization and sanitation was poor. An outbreak of c...
Soils have a profound impact on the causation and geographical distribution of human disease and wel...
The last half century has witnessed two landmark events in medical history. The 1970s saw euphoria a...
Research leading to this article was funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant under the ...
Medical geography is a small sub-discipline of academic geography. Its presence within histories of...
Analysing geographically-related disease data This issue of Statistical Methods in Medical Research ...
In 1854, Dr. John Snow identified the Broad Street pump as the source of an intense cholera outbreak...
In the mid-1800s, London physician John Snow made a startling observation that would change the way ...
Medical geography begins with sickness and health. The policies addressing disease, and the causes ...
By mapping the incidence of cholera deaths, Dr. John Snow was able to trace the spread of Cholera in...
The conceptual and methodological framework of modern medical geography began in 1950s with the publ...
John Snow’s investigation of cholera in 1850s London used analysis techniques that would now likely ...
The primary aim of this review was to evaluate the state of knowledge of the geographical distributi...
The article explores how Victorian visual culture was a vital force in the construction and dissemin...
Place. Area. Neighborhood. Latitude. Longitude. Distance. These geographic terms are increasingly fi...
In the mid-1800s, London was undergoing rapid urbanization and sanitation was poor. An outbreak of c...
Soils have a profound impact on the causation and geographical distribution of human disease and wel...
The last half century has witnessed two landmark events in medical history. The 1970s saw euphoria a...
Research leading to this article was funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant under the ...