Isaac Max Rubinow: Difference between revisions

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Isaac Max Rubinow (1875–1936) was an advocate of national health and social insurance.  His ''Social Insurance'' (1913) was an influential in forming progressive policy on the subject of unemployment compensation and national health insurance.  
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'''Isaac Max Rubinow''' (1875–1936) was an advocate of national health and social insurance.  His ''Social Insurance'' (1913) was an influential in forming progressive policy on the subject of unemployment compensation and national health insurance.  


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Rubinow was born in 1875 in Lithuania (at the time part of Russia) and immigrated to the United States when he was eighteen.  He attended [[New York University Medical School]] from which he received the M.D.  He then practiced medicine among the poorer Jewish neighborhoods of New York City until 1900 when he enrolled in [[Columbia University]] studying economics, sociology, and politics.  In 1903, he took a position with the [[Bureau of Labor Statistics]], abandoning his medical profession.  He left the BLS in 1911 to finish his Ph.D. at Columbia which he did in 1914.  His dissertation was a comparative study of workingmen's insurance in Italy, Russia, and Spain, which was expanded for his ''Standards of Health Insurance'' (1916)<ref>Isaac Max Rubinow, ''Standards of Health Insurance'' (New York: Henry Holt, 1916).</ref>   
leading theorist on social insurance and one of the most influential writers on the subject. Rubinow was an MD, and held a Ph.D. in economics from Columbia University. His 1913 book, ''Social Insurance'', was the most influential early work on social security. His work impacted a generation of social reformers, including President Theodore Roosevelt, who used Rubinow's work in drafting the Progressive Party platform in 1912. The Progressive Party was the first of its kind to call for social insurance.-->
 
Rubinow was born in 1875 in Lithuania (at the time part of Russia) and immigrated to the United States when he was eighteen.  He attended New York University Medical School from which he received the M.D.  He then practiced medicine among the poorer Jewish neighborhoods of New York City until 1900 when he enrolled in Columbia University studying economics, sociology, and politics.  In 1903, he took a position with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, abandoning his medical profession.  He left the BLS in 1911 to finish his Ph.D. at Columbia which he did in 1914.  His dissertation was a comparative study of workingmen's insurance in Italy, Russia, and Spain, which was expanded for his ''Standards of Health Insurance'' (1916)<ref>Isaac Max Rubinow, ''Standards of Health Insurance'' (New York: Henry Holt, 1916).</ref>   


While at Columbia, Rubinow began advocating for a nationalized system of health insurance for the U.S.  He believed that only through a government-run health program could all the health needs of the working class be met.  He thought that private practice neglected the needs of the poor and that to remedy that, doctors should be salaried by the state or other public health organizations.<ref>Shifra Shvarts and Theodore M. Brown, "Kupat Holim, Dr. Isaac Max Rubinow, and the American Zionist Medical Unit's Experiment to Establish Health Care Services in Palestine, 1918-1923," ''Bulletin of the History of Medicine'' 72, no. 1 (1998), 32.</ref>
While at Columbia, Rubinow began advocating for a nationalized system of health insurance for the U.S.  He believed that only through a government-run health program could all the health needs of the working class be met.  He thought that private practice neglected the needs of the poor and that to remedy that, doctors should be salaried by the state or other public health organizations.<ref>Shifra Shvarts and Theodore M. Brown, "Kupat Holim, Dr. Isaac Max Rubinow, and the American Zionist Medical Unit's Experiment to Establish Health Care Services in Palestine, 1918-1923," ''Bulletin of the History of Medicine'' 72, no. 1 (1998), 32.</ref>


Rubinow joined the [[American Association for Labor Legislation]] (AALL) which had been active since 1906 advocating social legislation, including a national health insurance plan.  In 1916, he was appointed as the executive secretary of the [[American Medical Association]]'s Committee on Social Insurance which had been created that year.  With AMA sanction, Rubinow began promoting the AALL national health insurance plan but by the Spring of 1917 with the entry of the United States into World War I the movement was all but dead.
Rubinow joined the [[American Association for Labor Legislation]] (AALL) which had been active since 1906 advocating social legislation, including a national health insurance plan.  At this time he began lecturing and writing what became ''Social Insurance''.  As a leading social reformer, he was tapped by the 1912 [[Progressive Party]].  His views on social insurance became part of the Progressive Party's 1912 platform and [[Theodore Roosevelt]]'s presidential campaign.  In 1916, he was appointed as the executive secretary of the [[American Medical Association]]'s Committee on Social Insurance which had been created that year.  With AMA sanction, Rubinow began promoting the AALL national health insurance plan but by the Spring of 1917 with the entry of the United States into World War I the movement was all but dead.


Following the collapse of his efforts for a national health insurance program, Rubinow became active in the American Zionist Medical Unit.  Rubinow was appointed medical director of the American Zionist Medical Unit in 1918.  The aim of the AZMU was to provide medical relief to Jewish and Arab Palestinians who had suffered under Turkish rule during World War I.  As executive director, he centralized and more or less nationalized medicine in Palestine, putting into operation the policies he had advocated with the AALL and the AMA.  By 1921, Rubinow had expanded his program in Palestine to include school health, and maternal and child welfare.  He also damaged relations with the workers mutual aid society Kupat Holim which had started receiving AZMU funds in 1918.  His leadership of AZMU was not without critics, besides the Kupat Holim.  AZMU had constant budget and internal problems of its own, and he was often criticized in the press.  Rubinow left the AZMU in 1923 and returned to the U.S.<ref> 36-44.</ref>
Following the collapse of his efforts for a national health insurance program, Rubinow became active in the American Zionist Medical Unit.  Rubinow was appointed medical director of the American Zionist Medical Unit in 1918.  The aim of the AZMU was to provide medical relief to Jewish and Arab Palestinians who had suffered under Turkish rule during World War I.  As executive director, he centralized and more or less nationalized medicine in Palestine, putting into operation the policies he had advocated with the AALL and the AMA.  By 1921, Rubinow had expanded his program in Palestine to include school health, and maternal and child welfare.  He also damaged relations with the workers mutual aid society Kupat Holim which had started receiving AZMU funds in 1918.  His leadership of AZMU was not without critics, besides the Kupat Holim.  AZMU had constant budget and internal problems of its own, and he was often criticized in the press.  Rubinow left the AZMU in 1923 and returned to the U.S.<ref>Shifra Shvarts and Theodore M. Brown, "Kupat Holim, Dr. Isaac Max Rubinow, and the American Zionist Medical Unit's Experiment to Establish Health Care Services in Palestine, 1918-1923," ''Bulletin of the History of Medicine'' 72, no. 1 (1998), 36-44.</ref>


While at Columbia, Rubinow had joined the [[American Socialist Party]].  As a Russian Jew, Marxism was part of his cultural heritage.  While Rubinow may have been conscious of the Lithuanian Jewish labor movement of the 1880s and 1890s (when he was in his teens), he did not participate, but he remained sympathetic to the labor movement ever after.  Later in life, he distanced himself from socialist politics, relying mostly on his professional reputation as a social scientist expert on social insurance.
While at Columbia, Rubinow had joined the [[American Socialist Party]].  As a Russian Jew, Marxism was part of his cultural heritage.  While Rubinow may have been conscious of the Lithuanian Jewish labor movement of the 1880s and 1890s (when he was in his teens), he did not participate, but he remained sympathetic to the labor movement ever after.  Later in life, he distanced himself from socialist politics, relying mostly on his professional reputation as a social scientist expert on social insurance.

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Isaac Max Rubinow (1875–1936) was an advocate of national health and social insurance. His Social Insurance (1913) was an influential in forming progressive policy on the subject of unemployment compensation and national health insurance.

Rubinow was born in 1875 in Lithuania (at the time part of Russia) and immigrated to the United States when he was eighteen. He attended New York University Medical School from which he received the M.D. He then practiced medicine among the poorer Jewish neighborhoods of New York City until 1900 when he enrolled in Columbia University studying economics, sociology, and politics. In 1903, he took a position with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, abandoning his medical profession. He left the BLS in 1911 to finish his Ph.D. at Columbia which he did in 1914. His dissertation was a comparative study of workingmen's insurance in Italy, Russia, and Spain, which was expanded for his Standards of Health Insurance (1916)[1]

While at Columbia, Rubinow began advocating for a nationalized system of health insurance for the U.S. He believed that only through a government-run health program could all the health needs of the working class be met. He thought that private practice neglected the needs of the poor and that to remedy that, doctors should be salaried by the state or other public health organizations.[2]

Rubinow joined the American Association for Labor Legislation (AALL) which had been active since 1906 advocating social legislation, including a national health insurance plan. At this time he began lecturing and writing what became Social Insurance. As a leading social reformer, he was tapped by the 1912 Progressive Party. His views on social insurance became part of the Progressive Party's 1912 platform and Theodore Roosevelt's presidential campaign. In 1916, he was appointed as the executive secretary of the American Medical Association's Committee on Social Insurance which had been created that year. With AMA sanction, Rubinow began promoting the AALL national health insurance plan but by the Spring of 1917 with the entry of the United States into World War I the movement was all but dead.

Following the collapse of his efforts for a national health insurance program, Rubinow became active in the American Zionist Medical Unit. Rubinow was appointed medical director of the American Zionist Medical Unit in 1918. The aim of the AZMU was to provide medical relief to Jewish and Arab Palestinians who had suffered under Turkish rule during World War I. As executive director, he centralized and more or less nationalized medicine in Palestine, putting into operation the policies he had advocated with the AALL and the AMA. By 1921, Rubinow had expanded his program in Palestine to include school health, and maternal and child welfare. He also damaged relations with the workers mutual aid society Kupat Holim which had started receiving AZMU funds in 1918. His leadership of AZMU was not without critics, besides the Kupat Holim. AZMU had constant budget and internal problems of its own, and he was often criticized in the press. Rubinow left the AZMU in 1923 and returned to the U.S.[3]

While at Columbia, Rubinow had joined the American Socialist Party. As a Russian Jew, Marxism was part of his cultural heritage. While Rubinow may have been conscious of the Lithuanian Jewish labor movement of the 1880s and 1890s (when he was in his teens), he did not participate, but he remained sympathetic to the labor movement ever after. Later in life, he distanced himself from socialist politics, relying mostly on his professional reputation as a social scientist expert on social insurance.


Dr Rubinow married twice. First was to Sophie Himwich with whom he had two children: Raymond S. Rubinow (1905-1996) who was active in New York public fields and Olga Rubinow Lurie (1907-2004), a child psychologist. Rubinow's second marriage was to Consuelo Kamholz (1909-1993) with whom he had no children.

References

  1. ^ Brown, Theodore M.; Elizabeth Fee (August 2002). "Isaac Max Rubinow : Advocate for Social Insurance". Am J Public Health (Washington D.C.: American Public Health Association) 92 (8): 1224–1225. doi:10.2105/AJPH.92.8.1224. ISSN 1541-0048. http://www.ajph.org/cgi/content/full/92/8/1224. Retrieved 2009-01-14. 
   * CAS (2008), "History", CAS Overview, Casualty Actuarial Society, http://www.casact.org/about/index.cfm?fa=aboutTheCAS, retrieved 2008-09-14 


Shvarts, Shifra, and Theodore M. Brown. "Kupat Holim, Dr. Isaac Max Rubinow, and the American Zionist Medical Unit's Experiment to Establish Health Care Services in Palestine, 1918-1923." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 72, no. 1 (1998): 28-46.

J. Lee Kreader, "Isaac Max Rubinow: Pioneering Specialist in Social Insurance," Social Services Review 9 (1976): 416-17.

J. Lee Kreader, "America's Prophet for Social Security: A Biography of Isaac Max Rubinow" (Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, l988), pp. 294-300.

Ronald L. Numbers, Almost Persuaded: American Physicians and Compulsory Health Insurance, 1912-1920. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978), pp. 14-26.

  1. Isaac Max Rubinow, Standards of Health Insurance (New York: Henry Holt, 1916).
  2. Shifra Shvarts and Theodore M. Brown, "Kupat Holim, Dr. Isaac Max Rubinow, and the American Zionist Medical Unit's Experiment to Establish Health Care Services in Palestine, 1918-1923," Bulletin of the History of Medicine 72, no. 1 (1998), 32.
  3. Shifra Shvarts and Theodore M. Brown, "Kupat Holim, Dr. Isaac Max Rubinow, and the American Zionist Medical Unit's Experiment to Establish Health Care Services in Palestine, 1918-1923," Bulletin of the History of Medicine 72, no. 1 (1998), 36-44.