'The dangers attending these conditions are evident': Public Health and the Working Environment of Lancashire Textile Communities, c .1870-1939

This article examines the position of the working environment within public health priorities and as a contributor to the health of a community. Using two Lancashire textile towns (Burnley and Blackburn) as case studies and drawing on a variety of sources, it highlights how, while legislation set th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social history of medicine : the journal of the Society for the Social History of Medicine 2013-11, Vol.26 (4), p.672
1. Verfasser: Greenlees, Janet
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article examines the position of the working environment within public health priorities and as a contributor to the health of a community. Using two Lancashire textile towns (Burnley and Blackburn) as case studies and drawing on a variety of sources, it highlights how, while legislation set the industry parameters for legal enforcement of working conditions, local public health priorities were pivotal in setting codes of practice. The complexities entwined with identifying the working environment as a cause of ill health and with improving it were entangled within the local community health context. In addition, the multiple understandings of Medical Officers of Health surrounding the remit of their responsibilities impacted the local health context. These did not always parallel national regulations. Indeed, it was these local, community specific forces that set the public health agenda, determined its path and the place of the working environment within this.
ISSN:0951-631X