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

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

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©2024 Lindsay McLaren, Donald W. M. Juzwishin, Rogelio Velez Mendoza.
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