Figures
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: The Nuances of Neglect under the New Poor Law
Part 1
2. Victorian ‘State Doctors': Medical Officers of the Poor Law
3. Negligence: The ‘Psychological Moment’
4. Framing and Mapping Negligence under the Poor Law
Part 2
5. A Latent Failure: The Crusade against Outdoor Relief
6. Survival of the Fittest: Indoor Neglect
7. A Catch-22: Outdoor Neglect
8. Conclusion: Seen but not heard? The Patient’s voice
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Provides the first comprehensive analysis of medical negligence under the Victorian poor law.
Kim Price is a Research Fellow with Northumbria University, UK and an Honorary Visiting Fellow with the Centre for Medical Humanities at the University of Leicester, UK. He has been a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow and the winner of several other research funding awards.
Medical Negligence in Victorian Britain demonstrates for the first
time the frequency and regularity with which poor law medical
officers were charged with neglect ... [and] provides a nuanced
history of [their] attempts to reform medical care.
*Social History of Medicine*
Carefully written and skilfully argued ... Price’s book is an
important intervention in welfare, poor law and medical history ...
There is much to learn in this book.
*Rural History*
Medical Negligence in Victorian Britain presents a compelling
‘anti-progress’ study, which shows the ongoing structural and
economic problems that fed into neglect and negligence ... [A]
valuable contribution ... [and] a thoroughly researched book.
*The Economic History Review*
Kim Price has produced a richly detailed study ... Price should be
congratulated for bringing this crisis to light with unprecedented
rigor, but the novelty of the work also resides in the way it seeks
to explain why and how this crisis came about ...[this is]
essential reading for all historians and postgraduate students ...
it should also be of interest to contemporary health care
practitioners.
*History: Reviews of New Books*
This book provides an original contribution that is supported by
statistics and case studies.
*Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine (Bloomsbury
translation)*
The history of medical negligence is a subject that has pressing
contemporary relevance. Kim Price’s Medical Negligence in Victorian
Britain is a carefully researched and richly detailed study that
will be of interest to historians and practitioners of medicine,
ethics, and law. With a focus on the New Poor Law, Price trains a
spotlight on the medical mistreatment of some of the most
vulnerable members of society, the poorest of the poor. In so
doing, he skillfully reinvigorates debates at the intersection of
medical and welfare history in a way that invites us to rethink
questions of citizenship, patient rights, and the iniquities of
health care delivery.
*Graham Mooney, Assistant Professor of History, Institute of the
History of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University, USA*
The fascinating story and explanation Kim Price outlines in Medical
Negligence in Victorian Britain is set in the dense and intricate
matrix of legal, medical, social and political history. Rich in
contemporary parallels, stated and unstated, Professor Price offers
a fresh, and much needed perspective on important facets of the
Poor Law, medical professionalism and medical negligence in late
nineteenth century Britain. Along the way Medical Negligence in
Victorian Britain explicitly and implicitly illustrates that both
medical error and medical neglect can only be accurately and subtly
understood when placed full sociological and political context and
not merely viewed as isolated individual events involving single
physician-patient dyads. Professor Price’s work is assiduously
researched using both well know and new resources in inventive and
striking ways. His analysis is rigorous yet remains readable
without sacrificing nuance. Medical Negligence in Victorian Britain
stands not only an important adjuvant to existing Poor Law
literature, but its erudite and eclectic scope should serve as a
model to those attempting to examine legal and medical
developments.
*Kenneth DeVille, Professor of Bioethics and Chief Institutional
Integrity Officer in the Division Health Sciences, East Carolina
University, USA*
This is an excellent, detailed account of what medical negligence
under the New Poor Law of 1834 meant theoretically and practically
in Victorian Britain. Price draws on socio-legal analysis to show
that a surprising number of charges of neglect were made against
poor law doctors, contrary to older historiography … What emerges
from this groundbreaking work is that the crusades launched in the
later 19th century by official and non-official groups to reform
the poor law system actually made conditions much worse for both
doctors and patients. Summing Up: Essential. Graduate students,
faculty, professionals.
*CHOICE*
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