民权、城市政策与美国紧急医疗服务体系的起源

Civil rights, urban policy, and the origins of the U.S. emergency medical services system

Urban Studies · 2026
被引 0
ABS 3

中文导读

研究揭示美国紧急医疗服务体系的关键进步源于匹兹堡民权组织Freedom House的黑人医护人员,并探讨城市政策与健康公平的关联。

Abstract

For centuries, Black communities have responded to health discrimination and inequality by creating institutions to meet local health needs. Mid-20th-century spatial transformations helped catalyze two distinct conversations about emergency medical care. One focused on accidental death and disability in response to rising fatalities on the nation’s new highways and sprawling suburbs. Another was raised in Black communities creating their own paths toward critical care amidst racialized urban disinvestment. These conversations are fundamentally intertwined. The dominant narrative situates the origins of the emergency medical services system in the United States in the context of suburban highway development, increasing traffic fatalities, and advances in emergency medicine from wars in Korea and Vietnam. The most significant advances in emergency medical services at that time, however, came from doctors and Black paramedics in Pittsburgh organized through a local civil rights organization Freedom House Enterprises. Drawing on archival documents and secondary sources about early ambulance services along with the legislative history of the Emergency Medical Services Systems Act of 1973, this research highlights how several dimensions of contemporary emergency medical services training and standards in the United States emerged from civil rights struggles. It focuses on the pivotal role of Freedom House and its legacy for emergency medical services, and ties these together with shifts in urban planning and policy, in particular the Model Cities Program. This history illuminates the significance of pre-hospital emergency care in health equity and its implications for urban justice today.

民权运动城市政策紧急医疗服务健康公平城市正义