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Covenant of Care
Bookstore | Seasonal Catalog Book Listings | Fall and Winter 2006 Catalog | Covenant of Care

Covenant of Care
Covenant of Care

Price: $37.95 


Subtitle: Newark Beth Israel and the Jewish Hospital in America
Author: Alan M. Kraut and Deborah A. Kraut
Subject: History of Medicine / Regional
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3910-2
Pages: 328 pp. 13 b&w illustrations
Publication Date: January, 2007


Praise for Covenant of Care

"The history of Newark Beth Israel Hospital is a wonderful case study of a hospital founded by a religious denomination and how it changed over time. The Krauts have done an excellent job of placing this institution within a national context."-Gerald N. Grob, author of The Deadly Truth: A History of Disease in America


Description:

Where were you born? Were you born at the Beth? Many thousands of Americans-Jewish and non-Jewish-were born at a hospital bearing the Star of David and named Beth Israel, Mount Sinai, or Montefiore. In the United States, health care has been bound closely to the religious impulse. Newark Beth Israel Hospital is a distinguished modern medical institution in New Jersey whose history opens a window on American health care, the immigrant experience, and urban life. Alan M. and Deborah A. Kraut tell the story of this important institution, illuminating the broader history of voluntary nonprofit hospitals created under religious auspices initially to serve poor immigrant communities. Like so many Jewish hospitals in the early half of the twentieth century, "the Beth" cared not only for its own community's poor and underprivileged, a responsibility grounded in the Jewish traditions of tzedakah ("justice") and tikkun olam ("to heal the world"), but for all Newarkers.

Since it first opened its doors in 1902, the Beth has been an engine of social change. Jewish women activists and immigrant physicians founded an institution with a nonsectarian admissions policy and a welcome mat for physicians and nurses seeking opportunity denied them by anti-Semitism elsewhere. Research, too, flourished at the Beth. Here dedicated medical detectives did path-breaking research on the Rh blood factor and pacemaker development. When economic shortfalls and the Great Depression threatened the Beth's existence, philanthropic contributions from prominent Newark Jews such as Louis Bamberger and Felix Fuld, the efforts of women volunteers, and, later, income from well-insured patients saved the institution that had become the pride of the Jewish community.

The Krauts tell the Beth Israel story against the backdrop of twentieth-century medical progress, Newark's tumultuous history, and the broader social and demographic changes altering the landscape of American cities. Today, the United States, in the midst of another great wave of immigration, once again faces the question of how to provide newcomers with culturally sensitive and economically accessible medical care. Covenant of Care will inform and inspire all those working to meet these demands, offering a compelling look at the creative ways that voluntary hospitals navigated similar challenges throughout the twentieth century.


About the Authors:

Alan M. Kraut is a professor of history at American University in Washington, D.C. Deborah A. Kraut is an independent author.


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Price: $37.95 





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