The earliest organized public health efforts, undertaken by a group known as “sanitarians,” were motivated by what they viewed as the interrelated problems of infectious disease and urban pollution. It was the Civil War, however, that “marked a watershed in the history of American public health.” It was then that formalized, state-authorized agencies took a leading role in promoting advances in pathology and chemistry, which led to a range of sanitation regulations.
The earliest organized public health efforts, undertaken by a group known as “sanitarians,” were motivated by what they viewed as the interrelated problems of infectious disease and urban pollution. It was the Civil War, however, that “marked a watershed in the history of American public health.” It was then that formalized, state-authorized agencies took a leading role in promoting advances in pathology and chemistry, which led to a range of sanitation regulations.