David T. Beito
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
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Featured researches published by David T. Beito.
Social Science History | 2006
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito
Under the burden of Jim Crow, how did African Americans obtain health care? For nearly 40 years the Afro-American Hospital of Yazoo City, Mississippi, was a leading health care supplier for blacks in the Mississippi Delta. It was founded in 1928 by the Afro-American Sons and Daughters, a black fraternal society, and provided a wide range of medical services. The society, which eventually had 35,000 members, was led by Thomas J. Huddleston, a prosperous black entrepreneur and advocate of Booker T. Washingtons self-help philosophy. The hospital had a low death rate compared to other hospitals that served blacks in the South during the period. It ceased operation in 1966 as a fraternal entity after years of increasingly burdensome regulation, competitive pressure from government and third-party health care alternatives, and the migration of younger dues-paying blacks to the North.
Archive | 2002
David T. Beito; Peter Gordon; Alexander Tabarrok; Paul Johnson
Archive | 1989
David T. Beito
Archive | 2009
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito
Social Science History | 2006
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito
The Independent Review | 2000
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito
The Independent Review | 2010
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito
The Independent Review | 2008
David T. Beito
The Independent Review | 2008
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito
The Independent Review | 2006
David T. Beito; Linda Royster Beito