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Title: Gender and cancer in Britain, 1860-1910: the emergence of cancer as a public health concern. Author: Moscucci O. Journal: Am J Public Health; 2005 Aug; 95(8):1312-21. PubMed ID: 16006420. Abstract: Historical work on cancer has suggested that a range of political, social, and medical concerns stimulated the emergence of cancer as a public health problem in the early 20th century.I argue that anxiety about cervical cancer mortality was instrumental in establishing cancer as a major focus of concern for the British public health service. This development was closely bound to assumptions about the association of gender with cancer, the redefinition of cancer as a surgical problem, the politics of empire, and the climate of public and medical disquiet about gynecological surgery engendered by feminist and antivivisectionist critiques of medical science.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]