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Anna Kolchinsky
"Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing but medicine on a grand scale."

 
Abstract
Political structures, ideology, and science interact to shape public health policy in a way that is complex and still poorly understood. The German experience in the 20th century provides a veritable laboratory for studying this interplay. An examination of major milestones in scientific understanding, medical practice, public health policy, legislation, and regulation under successive German states and governments will help to clarify their interaction. I plan to investigate approaches to the treatment and control of tuberculosis under German governments from the Kaiser Reich into the postwar period, when the discovery of streptomycin in 1945 presented the first effective cure. Over this turbulent era, profound changes occurred in the scientific understanding of tuberculosis. Tuberculosis had reached epidemic proportions in Germany in the wake of the industrial revolution, spurring considerable research into its origins, treatment, and the conditions of its spread. Robert Koch’s 1882 discovery of the tuberculosis bacillus launched a period of progress in diagnosis and treatment that coincided with increased political interest in public health more generally. I will look at the development and variation of tuberculosis control measures under the Kaiser Reich, during the Weimar Republic, in the era of Nazism, and in the post-1945 occupation zones. While some tuberculosis control strategies, such as sanatoria, were used throughout this era, others, such as quarantine, were applied from time to time by different governments. There are numerous other examples that this study will chart. Ultimately, I hope to understand, through the case study of tuberculosis treatment and control, how the interaction between various German states’ ideologies, their medical traditions, and their scientific knowledge shaped Germany’s public health policies and practices.
   
 

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