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        Constructing the 'New Australian Patient': Assimilation as preventative medicine in post-war Australia

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        Assimilation_as_preventative_medicine_pre_publication_version_March_2019_cs.pdf (PDF, 583Kb)
        Author
        Henrich, Eureka
        Attention
        2299/21416
        Abstract
        This article brings together historical questions about the nature of assimilation and the medicalisation of migrants in the post-war era, with a focus on medical writings about migrant patients in Australia in the 1950s and 1960s. It argues that physicians adopted official assimilation ideologies to construct a “New Australian patient” whose beliefs and behaviours indicated a less sophisticated understanding of medicine, and who suffered particular psychosomatic illnesses and health risks linked to their migration, socio-economic status and linguistic isolation. By making assimilation medical, these doctors helped bridge the cultural gulf that existed between Australian doctors and their migrant patients, but they also perpetuated cultural stereotypes through which certain unassimilable groups were blamed for their own medical problems.
        Publication date
        2019-05-01
        Published in
        Histoire Sociale-Social History
        Published version
        https://doi.org/10.1353/his.2019.0005
        Other links
        http://hdl.handle.net/2299/21416
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