Health Care, Hospitals and Racial Hygiene in German Colonial Windhoek (1890-1915)

Wessels, Quenton Bester and Taylor, Adam Michael and Correia, Jc and Brock, BC (2018) Health Care, Hospitals and Racial Hygiene in German Colonial Windhoek (1890-1915). Vesalius, 24 (2). pp. 49-59. ISSN 1373-4857

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Abstract

The gradual progress of health care within Namibia (formerly known as German South-West Africa), coincided with the three major historic periods: colonial settlement, the Herero-Nama genocide (1904-1907), and the transition of administration of the colony after the First World War. Here the authors draw upon primary and secondary sources to provide insights on the development of hospitals, health care and racial hygiene in in the colony with specific reference to Windhoek. The aim here is to contribute towards the lacking historiography of the medical landscape of Windhoek. Health care during the period of German colonial rule was centralised and segregated, and this trend prevailed when South Africa undertook administration of the colony. The initial strategy under German rule was to increase the formal treatment facilities within Swakopmund and Windhoek during the 1890s. The early growth of health care and hospitals was chiefly aimed at the needs of the white Europeans and driven by principles of racial hygiene.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Vesalius
ID Code:
128882
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
08 Nov 2018 13:56
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
11 Oct 2024 00:22