Megan J. Davies
York University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Megan J. Davies.
Bulletin of the History of Medicine | 2002
Megan J. Davies
Little has been written about the formation of state medicine in early-twentieth-century Canada, particularly during the Depression era. Indeed, many historians and policy analysts have assumed that this was a time of stagnation and retrenchment in state health provision. To foster a more nuanced analysis of the formation of the Canadian medical state during the Depression decade, this article focuses on British Columbia and the public health initiatives brought in by the provincial Liberal government of T. D. Pattullo. In B.C., an energetic cadre of policymakers and bureaucrats sought to reform existing services by using professionally educated personnel, centralized administrative hierarchies, community education, and the surveillance of target health populations. Funding from the provincial government and the Rockefeller Foundation permitted considerable expansion in a range of public health sectors that included vital statistics, rural health centers, tuberculosis and venereal disease treatment schemes, and laboratory services. This article tells the story of this important period by bringing together details of the professional and personal lives of key individuals-the majority of whom were men-and exploring the new provincial health programs that were developed in B.C. during the interwar years.
Archive | 2016
Megan J. Davies; Erika Dyck; Leslie Baker; Lanny Beckman; Geertje Boschma; Chris Dooley; Kathleen Kendall; Eugène LeBlanc; Robert J. Menzies; Marina Morrow; Diane Purvey; Nérée St-Amand; Marie-Claude Thifault; Jayne Melville Whyte; Victor Willis
Psychiatric deinstitutionalisation began in Canada in earnest during the 1960s and continues today. The downsizing and closure of custodial mental hospitals did not occur uniformly across the country, and regional variations in government, healthcare staff and community care policies profoundly shaped the process. The Saskatchewan Mental Hospital at Weyburn, the last asylum built in the Victorian style in the British Commonwealth, was the first to shut its doors, which it did dramatically in 1963. Others closed in stages, emptying wings and transitioning into outpatient care facilities or, as was the case in Alberta, repurposing the buildings for brain injured patients requiring shorter-term stays. Some facilities remained open with a reduced patient population and abandoned sections of the hospital that no longer conformed to the standards for privacy or health and safety regulations. Eastern Canadian provinces like Nova Scotia had not subscribed to large-scale custodial institutions in the first place, and while deinstitutionalisation from cottage-style facilities also occurred, the pace and impact of that change was profoundly different for staff, communities and ex-patients. Several Ontario-based institutions centralised their services, closing some and enlarging others. British Columbia’s iconic Riverview mental hospital continued to exist partially until 2012, looming large in cultural memory, as did many of these other monuments to what soon became a bygone era of psychiatric care. This regional variation in service delivery has in part characterised deinstitutionalisation in Canada, and also helps to underscore how patients from place to place may have encountered very different circumstances as they moved out of institutional care.
Gender & History | 1997
Megan J. Davies
Mitchinson, Wendy The Nature of Their Bodies: Women and Their Doctors in Victorian Canada Vertinsky, Patricia A. The Eternally Wounded Woman: Women, Exercise, and Doctors in the Late Nineteenth Century Borst, Charlotte, G. Catching Babies: The Professionalization of Childbirth, 1870–1920 Apple, Rima, D. (ed.) Women, Health and Medicine in America: A Historical Handbook Rothman, Sheila Living in the Shadow of Death: Tuberculosis and the Social Experience of Illness in American History
Archive | 2003
Megan J. Davies
Histoire Sociale-social History | 2005
Megan J. Davies
Oral History Forum d'histoire orale | 2014
Geertje Boschma; Megan J. Davies; Marina Morrow
Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Revue de la Société historique du Canada | 2001
Megan J. Davies
Canadian Historical Review | 2018
Megan J. Davies
Journal of Canadian Studies-revue D Etudes Canadiennes | 2017
Megan J. Davies
Journal of Canadian Studies-revue D Etudes Canadiennes | 2017
Megan J. Davies; Rachel Barken