Childhood health-care practices among Italians and Jews in the United States, 1910-1940
Date
1994
Authors
Goldstein, Alice
Watkins, Susan Cotts
Spector, Ann Rosen
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Health Transition Centre, National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, The Australian National University,
Abstract
This paper examines attitudes toward childhood health-care practices among urban Italian and Jewish families in the United States in the first part of the twentieth century. Although women in both groups were concerned about their children’s health, Italian and Jewish respondents differed in their attitudes toward home remedies, doctors, and medical advice literature. Jewish women were more likely to turn rapidly to professional medical assistance, typically from Jewish doctors, whereas Italian women were more likely to rely longer on common sense before eventually seeking professional medical intervention outside the family and ethnic group. These differences are evident both in the respondents’ recollections of their mothers’ and their own child-care practices, and suggest persistent ethnic cultures. That differences in child care are consistent with the mortality differences documented in other sources supports previous speculations about the importance of child care, and thus the role of culture in health transitions.
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childhood health-care practices, Italians, Jews, United States, 1910-1940, attitudes, urban, culture
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