Abstract

Early medical social workers Ida Cannon and Ethel Cohen formulated innovative models of hospital social service in Boston. As directors of the social service departments of Massachusetts General and Beth Israel Hospitals, respectively, they ensured that medical social work developed as a profession. They also formulated standards of patient care and educated health‐care professionals about the social aspects of medicine. This study analyzes the work of Cannon and Cohen within the contexts of progressivism, professionalization, immigration, and ethnic identity. It proposes that Cohen adopted key aspects of Cannon’s model of hospital social service but revised it to further accommodate the particular ethnic needs of Jewish immigrants, who were not well served in Boston’s hospital structure. Cohen’s work provides an early model of culturally competent social work practice.

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