Twohig P L
Department of History, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Can Bull Med Hist. 1996;13(2):333-53. doi: 10.3138/cbmh.13.2.333.
In Nova Scotia before Confederation, medical care for native peoples formed an integral part of the fledgling Indian administration. As the colonial authorities became more involved in all aspects of native life, an opportunity for self-advancement was presented to doctors. Practioners among the Mikmaq came from the emerging medical elite. This article argues that their service to the Mikmaq was part of a broader and widespread reform effort. Doctors not only delivered care to the Mikmaq, but they also served the needs of a colonial administration actively seeking to settle natives in reserve communities. The activities of doctors, however, did not go uncontested. This study illustrates the complex interaction among the native administration, the Mikmaq population, and a medical community struggling to organize.
在联邦成立前的新斯科舍省,为原住民提供医疗服务是新兴的印第安管理机构不可或缺的一部分。随着殖民当局更多地介入原住民生活的方方面面,医生们获得了自我发展的机会。米克马克族中的从业者来自新兴的医学精英群体。本文认为,他们为米克马克族提供服务是更广泛、普遍的改革努力的一部分。医生们不仅为米克马克族提供医疗服务,还满足了殖民政府积极寻求让原住民定居在保留地社区的需求。然而,医生们的活动并非毫无争议。这项研究揭示了原住民管理机构、米克马克族群体以及努力进行组织的医疗界之间复杂的互动关系。