Full Description
War, Politics, and Philanthropy: The History of Rehabilitation Medicine describes the development of this remarkable field of medical care from its inception in WWI and WWII through its dramatic expansion during the 1980s, as stimulated by the Medicare program. The book vividly describes how the field developed in response to the need for care and rehabilitation of wounded soldiers, disabled veterans, and members of the workforce in the 1940s and 1950s. It focuses on the leadership and contributions of statesman Bernard Baruch, civil servant extraordinaire Mary Switzer, physicians Henry Kessler, Frank Krusen, and Howard Rusk, and the professional and disability associations with which they collaborated. The book ends with the crescendo of the enactment of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which embodied the vision and goals of rehabilitation medicine since the 1960s.
Contents
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Acknowledgements
Chapter 3 Chapter 1 - Setting the Stage
Chapter 4 Chapter 2 - In the Beginning: The Early Years of the Founders of Rehabilitation Medicine
Chapter 5 Chapter 3 - The Roots of Rehabilitation Medicine in the Progessive Era, 1900 to 1920
Chapter 6 Chapter 4 - The Nineteen-Twenties and Small Steps Forward
Chapter 7 Chapter 5 - The Thirties, Medicine, Social Insurance, and Rehabilitation at the Mayo Clinic
Chapter 8 Chapter 6 - World War II, Howard Rusk, Henry Kessler, and the Baruch Committee
Chapter 9 Chapter 7 - The Immediate Postwar Years: The VA, Private Rehabilitation Facilities, Unions, and a Medical Specialty in PM&R
Chapter 10 Chapter 8 - Polio, FDR, and Rehabilitation Medicine
Chapter 11 Chapter 9 - The Expansive 1950s: Rehabilitation Medicine Develops Under the Leadership of Mary Switzer and Howard Rusk
Chapter 12 Chapter 10 - Rehabilitation Leadership in the Turbulent 1960s and the End of an Era
Chapter 13 Chapter 11 - The 1970s: Vulnerability, New Leadership, and the Disability Movement
Chapter 14 Chapter 12 - The 1970s: Congressional Leadership and the Golden Era for Comprehensive Rehabilitation and Disability Policy
Chapter 15 Chapter 13 - The 1980s: Medicare Expansion; Rehabilitation Research at the NIH and the Maturation of Rehabilitation Medicine
Chapter 16 Chapter 14 - The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Comprehensive Rehabilitation Medicine
Chapter 17 Chapter 15 - A Brief Epilogue
Chapter 18 Bibliography



