Smoking Privileges is a compelling, authoritative, and relevant historical analysis of smoking policy, social attitudes, mental illness, scientific research, and industry. -- Martha N. Gardner * Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences *
Smoking Privileges is truly a wonderful and important book that forces us to rethink the history of smoking and reminds clinicians of the complexities of smoking persistence. It should be required reading for mental health practitioners, public health workers, and historians. -- Howard I. Kushner * Nat C. Robertson Distinguished Professor, Emory University *
In Smoking Privileges, Laura D. Hirshbein traces the inexorable linkages between smoking and mental illness up through the twentieth century, weaving in the dual stories of smoking's rise as a public health menace and the decline of state mental hospitals. A clinical psychiatrist, Hirshbein shares her perspective as someone with empathy for and experience with this population. * Health Affairs *
Charts the changes in attitudes and practices around tobacco over the decades, noting how culture, science, and time interweave to influence people and change ideas. It provides a fascinating account of how a behavior such as smoking can become transformed into a pathological entity, and it asks us to consider the deeper human elements of choice and free will as we consider how and why we provide treatment. * PsycCRITIQUES *
[Hirshbein's] use of a wide array of evidence, ranging from scientific studies to patient memoirs to corporate records, makes her work both persuasive and highly engaging ... Smoking Privileges merits a wide readership among historians of medicine, science and health policy, as well as anyone interested in the history of smoking and mental health. * Social History of Medicine *
Though not negating the harmful effects of cigarette smoking, Hirshbein displays sensitivity to the role and meaning cigarette smoking may play in the lives of people with serious mental illness and encourages readers to view cigarette smoking, regulation, and intervention in a broad context. She emphasizes the need to incorporate the perspectives of people with serious mental illness before imposing public health policy and treatment onto this population, to examine the motivations of the tobacco and pharmaceutical industries, and to consider possible unintended consequences. Highly recommended. * CHOICE *
Smoking Privileges is a compelling, authoritative, and relevant historical analysis of smoking policy, social attitudes, mental illness, scientific research, and industry. -- Martha N. Gardner * Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences *
Smoking Privileges is truly a wonderful and important book that forces us to rethink the history of smoking and reminds clinicians of the complexities of smoking persistence. It should be required reading for mental health practitioners, public health workers, and historians. -- Howard I. Kushner * Nat C. Robertson Distinguished Professor, Emory University *
In Smoking Privileges, Laura D. Hirshbein traces the inexorable linkages between smoking and mental illness up through the twentieth century, weaving in the dual stories of smoking's rise as a public health menace and the decline of state mental hospitals. A clinical psychiatrist, Hirshbein shares her perspective as someone with empathy for and experience with this population. * Health Affairs *
Charts the changes in attitudes and practices around tobacco over the decades, noting how culture, science, and time interweave to influence people and change ideas. It provides a fascinating account of how a behavior such as smoking can become transformed into a pathological entity, and it asks us to consider the deeper human elements of choice and free will as we consider how and why we provide treatment. * PsycCRITIQUES *
[Hirshbein's] use of a wide array of evidence, ranging from scientific studies to patient memoirs to corporate records, makes her work both persuasive and highly engaging ... Smoking Privileges merits a wide readership among historians of medicine, science and health policy, as well as anyone interested in the history of smoking and mental health. * Social History of Medicine *
Though not negating the harmful effects of cigarette smoking, Hirshbein displays sensitivity to the role and meaning cigarette smoking may play in the lives of people with serious mental illness and encourages readers to view cigarette smoking, regulation, and intervention in a broad context. She emphasizes the need to incorporate the perspectives of people with serious mental illness before imposing public health policy and treatment onto this population, to examine the motivations of the tobacco and pharmaceutical industries, and to consider possible unintended consequences. Highly recommended. * CHOICE *