
Contents
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Social Medicine and the State Social Medicine and the State
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Social Hygiene Social Hygiene
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Foreign Influences on Soviet Health Care Foreign Influences on Soviet Health Care
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Physical Culture and Its Militarization Physical Culture and Its Militarization
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines public health programs under the Stalinist regime. It first considers Soviet health care within the context of social medicine and the state's role as guarantor of public health. It then discusses Soviet health policy in relation to the establishment of state ministries of health and the mechanisms by which medical ideas and techniques were transmitted during the interwar period. In particular, it explains how the Commissariat of Health institutionalized a set of state interventionist practices to monitor and cultivate a healthy and fit population as the government shifted its health care approach from defensive to offensive. It also explores foreign influences on Soviet health care and concludes by analyzing how physical culture as a means of health promotion became a form of paramilitary training in the Soviet Union.
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