Skip to main content

A History of Public Health in Alberta, 1919-2019: List of Figures

A History of Public Health in Alberta, 1919-2019
List of Figures
  • Show the following:

    Annotations
    Resources
  • Adjust appearance:

    Font
    Font style
    Color Scheme
    Light
    Dark
    Annotation contrast
    Low
    High
    Margins
  • Search within:
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeA History of Public Health in Alberta, 1919-2019
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

table of contents
  1. Half Title Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright page
  4. Contents
  5. List of Figures
  6. List of Tables
  7. Abbreviations
  8. Acknowledgements
  9. Introduction - What Is Public Health, and Why Does It Matter?
  10. 1 - Who Is the Public in Public Health?
  11. 2 - Priorities and Concerns of Provincial Governments: A Historical Public Health Landscape
  12. 3 - Albertans’ Health over Time: What We Know (and Why We Don’t Know What We Don’t Know)
  13. 4 - Public Health Governance: A Journey of Expansion and Tension
  14. 5 - The Non-Profit Sector: Trials and Tribulations of the Alberta Public Health Association
  15. 6 - Public Health Education: Power and Politics in Alberta Universities
  16. 7 - Stories from First Nation Communities in Alberta: Reconciliation Involves All of Us
  17. 8 - Health Protection — Climate Change, Health, and Health Equity in Alberta
  18. 9 - Mobilizing Preventive Policy
  19. 10 - Health Promotion and the Ottawa Charter in Alberta: A Focus on Maternal and Child Health
  20. 11 - Disaster Mitigation, Preparedness, Response and Recovery: Lessons from Trains, Fires, Tornadoes and Floods
  21. 12 - Social Determinants of Health in the Alberta Government: Promising and Pernicious Historical Legacies
  22. 13 - Public Health Leadership: Courage, Conflict, and Evolving Understanding of Power
  23. Conclusion
  24. Appendix A
  25. Appendix B
  26. Index

List of Figures

Figure 0.1: Annual provincial government per capita health expenditure in current dollars for 1) public health (black bars) and 2) hospitals (grey bars), Alberta, 1975 to 2019.

Figure 0.2: Annual percentage of provincial government health expenditure on public health for Alberta, 1975 to 2019.

Figure 2.1: Number of words in Alberta government throne speeches, by year, 1906–2017.

Figure 2.2: Trends over time in the percent of all Alberta throne speech quasi-sentences coded as health (major topic code 3), 1906–2017 (lowess plot).

Figure 2.3: Trends over time in the percent of health quasi-sentences from the Alberta throne speeches coded under three sub-codes: Establishment or construction of treatment-oriented facilities or infrastructure (solid line), Prevention, protection, promotion, core public health functions (dashed line), and Treatment, curative, or management-oriented health care (dotted line), 1906–2017 (lowess plot).

Figure 2.4: Number of times “public health” is mentioned, in Alberta throne speech quasi-sentences coded as health (major topic code 3), by decade, 1906–2017.

Figure 2.5: Number of times “prevent” (and iterations) is mentioned, in quasi-sentences coded as health (major topic code 3) in the Alberta throne speech dataset, by decade (black bars).

Figure 3.1: Select leading causes of death, 1915 to 2015 (5-year intervals). Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2a: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1910 to 1920. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2b: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1923 to 1929. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2c: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1931 to 1939. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2d: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1941 to 1949. Rate per 100,000 population

Figure 3.2e: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1951 to 1959. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.3: Advertisement for polio insurance (1953).

Figure 3.2f: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1960 to 1968. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2g: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1969 to 1977. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2h: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 1985 to 1999. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.2i: Leading causes of death (individual codes), 2000 to 2015. Rate per 100,000 population.

Figure 3.4: Incidence of Gonococcal Infections (Gonorrhea), Alberta, 1919 to 2014.

Figure 4.1: Provincial higher-level divisions and branches under the ministries and departments responsible for public health in Alberta, 1919–1993.

Figure 5.1: Resolutions carried by the APHA, 1944–2017, organized according to their alignment with key public health domains (described in Table 5.1), expressed as a percent of total resolutions by decade.

Figure 5.2: Size of APHA membership, 1945–2015. Sources: Minutes from APHA Annual General Meetings, and APHA annual reports.

Figure 6.1: Summary points from the penultimate version (dated February 2006) of the Memorandum of Understanding for the pan-Alberta public health coalition.

Figure 7.1: Map of First Nations in Alberta, which include 48 Nations in three Treaty areas.

Figure 7.2: Map of Métis settlements and communities in Alberta.

Figure 9.1: Medical Offier of Health, Brent Friesen, served as a key spokesperson on fluoridation for the Calgary Regional Health Authority during the 1990s.

Figure 10.1: Infant mortality in Alberta, 1915 to 2015.

Figure 10.2: An Alberta public health nurse holding a child welfare clinic.

Figure 13.1: Malcolm Ross Bow.

Figure 13.2: Ashbury Somerville.

Figure 13.3: Laura Margaret Attrux.

Figure 13.4: Helen Griffith Wylie Watson (nee McArthur).

Figure 13.5: E.S.O. Smith.

Figure 13.6: James Howell.

Figure 13.7: John Waters.

Figure 13.8: Shirley Stinson.

Figure 13.9: Karen Mills.

Figure 13.10: Doug Wilson.

Figure 13.11: Muriel Stanley Venne.

Figure 13.12: Anne Fanning.

Figure 13.13: Wilton Littlechild.

Figure 13.14: Bretta Maloff.

Figure 13.15: David Swann.

Figure 13.16: Jan Reimer.

Figure 13.17: Louis Franscescutti.

Figure 13.18: James Talbot.

Figure 13.19: Karen Grimsrud.

Figure 13.20: Petra Shultz.

Figure 13.21: Kim Raine.

Figure 13.22: Les Hagen.

Annotate

Next Chapter
List of Tables
PreviousNext
©2024 Lindsay McLaren, Donald W. M. Juzwishin, Rogelio Velez Mendoza.
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org