Arts & Humanities
Mortality
100%
Historical Epidemiology
66%
Infectious Diseases
49%
Infant Mortality
47%
Cause of Death
41%
England
41%
Workhouse
41%
Health
38%
Fever
36%
Mortality Rate
36%
Urban History
35%
Wales
35%
Stillbirth
35%
Romola
32%
Tuberculosis
31%
Public Health
31%
Edwardian England
30%
Death Rate
30%
Historical Demography
28%
Victorian London
27%
History
26%
Victorian Britain
24%
Professionalization
24%
Infection
24%
Metanarrative
23%
Demography
22%
Infirmary
21%
Mortality Decline
20%
Structural Model
18%
Demographic Transition
18%
Diagnostics
18%
Metropolitan
18%
Killing
18%
Pathway
17%
Demographics
17%
General Register Office
17%
Epidemiology
16%
Domestic Space
15%
Medical Officer of Health
15%
Medical History
14%
Registration
14%
Reception
13%
Preventive Medicine
13%
Methodology
13%
Coercion
12%
Victorian Era
11%
Cholera
10%
Voluntary Hospitals
10%
Illness
10%
Architectural Plans
9%
Social Sciences
infant mortality
63%
mortality
50%
contagious disease
44%
public health
39%
workhouse
38%
urban history
28%
history
25%
cause of death
25%
health
24%
drama
20%
epidemiology
19%
structural model
18%
death
16%
Teaching
16%
diagnostic
16%
oppression
14%
radio
14%
contact
13%
infant
13%
graduate
12%
certification
12%
economy
11%
travel
11%
Infectious Disease Control
10%
methodology
9%
health report
9%
cause
7%
narrative
7%
entertainment program
7%
illness
7%
district
7%
population group
7%
reflexivity
6%
conditioning
6%
possession
6%
ban
6%
team teaching
6%
regulation
5%
Infant Health
5%
political influence
5%
student
5%
newspaper
5%
social problem
5%
grading
5%
broadcast
5%
Medicine & Life Sciences
Public Health
48%
Teaching
34%
Isolation Hospitals
33%
Visitors to Patients
31%
Drama
30%
Wales
30%
Mortality
28%
England
25%
Infant Mortality
21%
Global Health
19%
Health
18%
Communicable Diseases
16%
Public Health Schools
15%
Radio
14%
Clergy
13%
Health Education
12%
Baltimore
12%
Infections
12%
History
10%
Students
10%
World War I
10%
Cause of Death
8%
Voluntary Hospitals
8%
Life Change Events
8%
Coercion
6%
Working Women
6%
World War II
6%
Demography
6%
Psychological Power
6%
Graduate Education
5%
Medicine
5%
Social Problems
5%
Preventive Medicine
5%
Public Health Students
5%