Reviews
A well-written and compelling book that should convince academic, student, lay and professional audiences alike that immersion in the history of a disease is indispensable to treating it.
[Aging Bones] illustrate[s] the disparate yet powerful components of chronic disease for understanding medical practices and policies in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Grob's account is well written, clear and comprehensive in scope...should prove useful to any historian of medicine and will be especially valuable to historians interested in gerontology and women's health.
Elegantly written and deeply researched, Aging Bones shows how osteoporosis went from being treated as an inevitable part of getting older to a pathological disease state. An account that traverses Shakespearean sonnets to hormone replacement therapy, Grob’s study contains important lessons for historians as well as for millions of women who are advised to stave off frailty through daily doses of Vitamin D, exercise, and estrogen.
Book Details
Foreword, by Charles E. Rosenberg
Preface
List of Abbreviations
1. History and Demography
2. The Origins of a Diagnosis
3. The Transformation of Osteoporosis
4. Popularizing a Diagnosis
5. Internationalizing
Foreword, by Charles E. Rosenberg
Preface
List of Abbreviations
1. History and Demography
2. The Origins of a Diagnosis
3. The Transformation of Osteoporosis
4. Popularizing a Diagnosis
5. Internationalizing Osteoporosis
6. Therapeutic Expansion
7. Osteoporosis Triumphant?
Notes
Index