08 – Keber Katharina (Ljubljana) Post WWI children healthcare in Central Slovenia as experienced by Angela Boškin, the first Slovenian home care nurse

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Medikalisierte Kindheiten – Die neue Sorge um das Kind vom ausgehenden 19. bis ins späte 20. Jahrhundert
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    17:26
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27:09 min
01 - Eröffnung der Tagung Medikalisierte Kindheiten
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28:52 min
02 - Maria A. Wolf (Innsbruck) Medikalisierung der Sozialen Frage und wissenschaftliche Neuordnung der Kindheit
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21:39 min
03 - Kristina Schierbaum (Frankfurt) Janusz Korczak im Spannungsfeld von Pädiatrie und Pädagogik
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28:34 min
04 - Irene Berkel (Innsbruck) Die Neuvermessung der Kindheit in der psychoanalytischen Klinik und Theorie
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30:38 min
05 - Klara Meßner und Rodolfo Tomasi (Bozen) Nach zwei Diktaturen zur Demokratie Erwachsenen-, Kinder-Jugendpsychiatrie in Südtirol
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34:18 min
06 - Elisabeth Dietrich-Daum (Innsbruck) Die Innsbrucker Kinderbeobachtungsstation von Maria Nowak-Vogl (1947–1987). Projektbericht
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17:31 min
07 - Mirjam Janett (Basel) Die „behördliche Sorge“ um das Kind. Kindswegnahmen in Basel von 1945 bis 1972
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39:43 min
09 - Christine Hartig und Sylvelyn Hähner-Rombach (Ulm und Stuttgart) Institution, Zeitzeugen, Narration. Re-Konstruktionen der Innsbrucker Kinderbeobachtungsstation
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27:28 min
10 - Elisabeth Malleier (Wien) Die Sorge, meine Akte und ich

Post WWI children healthcare in Central Slovenia as experienced by Angela Boškin, the first Slovenian home care nurse.
Keber Katharina (Ljubljana)

The paper will address children healthcare in the first post- WWI decade in current Slovenia. At the time when school physicians have been returning from the military service and paediatricians have been becoming more active as well, the first Slovenian home care nurse Angela Boškin played a significant role in caring for infants and mothers as well as in the organisation and development of the home care service. By analysing her work, the paper will attempt to reconstruct the demanding post-war social conditions that required healthcare improvements for all children. Her work is distinguished by two key achievements. The establishment in 1919 of the first Slovenian counselling service for mothers and infants in Jesenice, which she achieved in cooperation with physicians. Thus Ms Boškin laid the foundation for the social and healthcare work of the home care nurses. In 1922, she established the children’s shelter in a rundown and overcrowded orphanage in Bohoričeva street in Ljubljana, which developed into the first childcare institution (Zavod za socialno higiensko zaščito dece) where Angela Boškin worked as the first professionally qualified nurse.

Moderation: Christina Antenhofer, Innsbruck

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