Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Medicine, social security, and occupational disabilities in Spain in the first half of the twentieth century

Abstracts

Relying on legislative, medical, institutional, media, and labor sources, the article examines how the issue of worker disabilities was addressed during the first half of the twentieth century. It shows how specialized medical care developed and evolved, along with a social safety network, with the ultimate aim of integrating those with occupational disabilities back into work and society.

occupational medicine; re-education; persons with disabilities; Instituto Nacional de Previsión; Spain; twentieth century


En el presente trabajo, utilizando fuentes legislativas, médicas, de algunas instituciones (CRS, IRS, INP, Irpit y Clínica del Trabajo), prensa general y obrera, se estudia el abordaje del problema de los inválidos del trabajo durante la primera mitad del siglo XX. Se trata de poner de relieve cómo junto a medidas de protección social se fue generando y articulando una atención médica especializada del accidentado que tendría como objetivo final la reintegración del inválido del trabajo a la sociedad.

medicina del trabajo; reeducación; inválidos; Instituto Nacional de Previsión; España, siglo XX


DOSSIÊ PERSUASIÓN Y DOMINIO: MEDICINA Y PÚBLICO EN ESPAÑA (SIGLOS XIX Y XX)

Medicine, social security, and occupational disabilities in Spain in the first half of the twentieth century* * This work has been carried out within the project of the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science (Reference Nº BHA2001-2979-C05-05) and with the help of 'Grupos Emergentes' of the Department of Health of Castilla-La Mancha (File Nº GC04004); and its translation into English has been funded by the Centre for Biomedical Research (CRIB).

Maria Isabel Porras Gallo

Department of History of Science, Albacete; Faculty of Medicine- Regional Centre of Biomedical Research (CRIB). University of Castilla-La Mancha. (Unidad Asociada. Instituto de Historia. CSIC. Madrid). C/ Almansa, 14; 02006 ALBACETE; MariaIsabel.Porras@uclm.es

ABSTRACT

Relying on legislative, medical, institutional, media, and labor sources, the article examines how the issue of worker disabilities was addressed during the first half of the twentieth century. It shows how specialized medical care developed and evolved, along with a social safety network, with the ultimate aim of integrating those with occupational disabilities back into work and society.

Keywords: occupational medicine; re-education; persons with disabilities; Instituto Nacional de Previsión; Spain; twentieth century.

The number of occupational accidents, a negative effect of the use of machinery inherent in the Industrial Revolution, continues to be a phenomenon of increasing social interest in our day, due to the high human and economic cost that it causes. For this reason there are many forums, both at national and international levels calling for greater knowledge of the subject in order to establish suitable preventive strategies to reduce their incidence and consequences. Recent historiography has also called for greater attention to the subject, which was hardly studied until the end of the twentieth century (Cooter & Luckin, 1997). In the effort to respond to this demand, we shall devote the pages that follow to highlighting the change in Spanish society's approach to the problem of the work disabled in the first half of the twentieth century.

As we shall show, the first target of the measures adopted was the improvement of living conditions by means of financial compensation (Montero, 1988; Cuesta, 1988; Samaniego, 1988); but they also sought not only the relief and treatment of the damages caused by occupational accidents but also their prevention and avoidance (Bachiller, 1984 and 1985; Bernabeu; Perdiguero; Zaragoza, 1992 and 2000; Rodríguez, 1993; Martínez-Pérez, 1992, 1994, 1998 and 2001; Medina; Rodríguez, 1992; Menéndez; Rodríguez, 1992 and 2003; Bartolomé, 2004). However, the functional and professional rehabilitation of work disabled and invalids and, therefore, their social reintegration were initially delayed (Martínez-Pérez & Porras, 2003). This type of measure slowly gained ground until it became a fundamental objective for the Medicine and the society of the inter-war period (Doriguzzi, 1994, pp. 89-121; Stiker, 1997, p. 129; Cooter, 2000, p. 372; Hamonet, 2004, p. 62). As we shall see, these changes in the approach to the problem of occupational accidents implied not only the establishment of policies of social protection, but also the design and implementation of progressively more specialized medical assistance. This assistance meant the incorporation of medical technologies (in the sense used by Stanton, 1999) and the creation of a new setting for a new clientele: that of the work disabled. Thus, from the prevailing 'medical' or 'individual' model of incapacity (Barnes; Mercer & Shakespeare, 2003, pp. 20-27), with these new therapeutic resources -functional and professional rehabilitation- it was hoped not only to facilitate the treatment of the victims of occupational accidents, but also their social reintegration.

The main target of this work is the analysis of the role that was played throughout the first half of the twentieth century by certain Spanish doctors and the National Insurance Institute (INP) in the establishment of the more specialized medical assistance that encouraged the return of the disabled to work and their reintegration into society. It is also our intention to try to show the main strategies and resources used to generate a clientele to which they could apply their new proposed measures.

Liability insurance to deal with work accidents at the beginning of the twentieth century

As it happened in other neighbouring countries, such as France (Porras, 2004; Porras, forthcoming a), the resistance to state interventionism was slowly overcome in Spain in the final years of the nineteenth century and early years of the twentieth, and state interventionist policies were introduced in response to the so-called 'social question'. In this sense, one of the first measures was the creation of the Commission of Social Reforms (CRS) in 1883 (Reformas Sociales, 1985; Álvarez, 1971; Álvarez, 1988, pp. 147-153; De la Calle, 1988; Palacio, 1988, pp. 23-51). From that moment on, not only hygiene and safety at work, but also matters concerning retirement funds and aid for patients and work disabled, as well as mutual aid societies, were the province of this Commission. It is no wonder, then, that its first practical achievements were the creation of the Home for Work Invalids (AIT) in Madrid in 1887 (Palacios, 1990, p. 6; and undated, p. 52) and the drafting and initial application of the Law of Work Accidents of 1900. Both initiatives had a different character, dealing with the problem of work victims from different approaches: the former dealt with it from charity, whereas the latter resorted to occupational insurance, one of the incipient forms of social protection of the time.

The AIT was inaugurated in 1889. Its function was 'to house unmarried or widowed workers, without young children, who as a result of accident have been rendered absolutely invalid for work' (Ministerio Gobernación, 1892, p. 11), and who could neither earn a living nor count on family support to survive. In keeping with this, the centre became a place of refuge, where no type of measures of functional and occupational rehabilitation was contemplated. On the other hand, the Law of Work Accidents of 1900, based like the French law of 1898 on the principle of 'occupational risk', was intended to be a useful resource to improve the situation of the workers (excluding those engaged in agricultural activities) faced by the effects of workplace accidents (Montero, 1988, pp. 119-146 et seq). The law granted the right to compensation and medical and pharmaceutical assistance to employees affected by an accident or physical harm, the result of which was temporary or permanent incapacity for work, or death (1 1 'Proyecto de Ley aprobado ( ) sobre accidentes del trabajo en los establecimientos industriales y mercantiles'. Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados, 108, 18-1-1900, Apéndice 3º. ). As we see, the economic situation of the work disabled and invalids could be improved by the indemnification established by the law, as well as by the right to receive medical aid until their return to work or their being declared permanently disabled.

Nevertheless, the law omitted measures that might contribute to helping the injured and disabled to return to work, since it did not envisage their functional and/or professional rehabilitation. In spite of this, the law favoured medical intervention in work accidents not only for forensic reasons, but also to provide specialized attention that would be more and more specific and complex. In fact, according to the Professor of Surgery at the Central University of Madrid, Alejandro San Martín (1847-1908), there might arise 'a new specialty' whose object would be the 'vigilance and assessment of the accidents of industry and other forms of human work' (San Martín, 1903, p. 5). In his opinion, this specialty should be run by 'labourist (obrerista) doctors', 'doctors expert in workers', 'healing specialists' or 'traumatists'. These new specialists, according to San Martín, should be surgeons with broad training in internal Medicine and many other specialties and diagnostic and therapeutic resources (among others, the use of massage, hydrotherapy, electricity and orthopaedic mechanics). As it will be seen, the development of this specialized interest (which in fact gave rise to the development of different specialties –Occupational Medicine, Traumatology, and Orthopaedic Surgery or Rehabilitation) involved the incorporation of various medical technologies and the appearance of new frames of reference. In fact, institutions were created far different from the old-fashioned AIT, where this new approach to the problems of victims and work disabled was developed.

The Law of Work Accidents of 1900 represented an important step, although it had some deficiencies and flaws. The hindrances were first noticed during its preparation, and became more evident when it came to be applied, firstly, by the CRS, and, from 1903, by its successor, the Institute of Social Reforms (IRS) (Palacio, 1988, pp. 53-135). The result was that the latter, whose responsibilities included those of 'preparing the legislation of work in its broadest sense' and 'encouraging social and governmental action in favour of the improvement or well-being of the working classes' (Article 1, Royal Decree of 23 April 1903, Gaceta de Madrid, 29 April), prepared a new bill in 1904. With this bill, it was hoped to resolve some of the main controversial points of the Law of 1900. As well as the advisability of extending the Law to agriculture, clarifying and extending the concept of accident (to include the acceptance of occupational illness), it put forward the key point of the type of insurance to be established, or the need to introduce a guarantee in the style of a National Insurance Fund against Work Accidents. The proposals on the type of required insurance focused either on a system of obligatory insurance similar to that of Germany, defended by the working sector (Montero, 1988, pp. 161-164), or a system of insurances controlled by private insurance companies. These subjects again appeared in the course of the debate registered in the IRS between November 1905 and June 1907, some changes being made in the new Bill which did not satisfy all the demands of the workers' representatives and the insurance companies (Montero, 1988, pp. 175-189). After this long process of negotiation, the Bill was presented to the Parliament on several occasions from 1910 onwards with scarcely any change to its content.

The creation of the National Insurance Institute (Inp) and the establishment of a system of subsidized independent insurance

Simultaneously with the application of the Law of 1900 and at the beginning of its reform, a new institution – the future INP – was being developed to organize a system of subsidized independent insurance (different, therefore, from the obligatory German social insurance) in response to the different risks (work accidents, illness, disability, old age, unemployment ). This system sought to offer an answer to the 'social question' in line with the new international tendencies in the area of social protection. A leading role, both in this laborious task and in the process of reform of the 1900 Law, was played by the insurance technician Jose Maluquer Salvador (Montero, 1988, pp. 210-221). This author, taking as a model national and international prototypes (the initiatives of some Spanish Savings Banks and Pension Funds, and the National Insurance Funds of Belgium and Italy), drew up the characteristics of the new institution and, at the same time, started to overcome the resistance of the more reticent Spanish sectors to state interventionism. All of this made it possible for the IRS to draft the INP Bill (by means of a report in which Maluquer was also involved) and for it to be approved on 2 November 1905 (Instituto, 1916). The creation of the INP was finally achieved in 1908 (Decree of 28 February 1908, Gaceta de Madrid, 29 February). The new Institute was constituted as an independent body with technical organization, national character, subsidiary responsibility on the part of the State (with respect to its financial bases), but permitting the collaboration of private enterprise. Its purpose was to establish the different subsidized free insurance.

The foregoing clearly shows the important role of Maluquer, both in the process of gestation and creation of the INP and in the attempted reform of the Law of Work Accidents of 1900. In both cases, the type of insurance to be established was a central point. In my opinion, these circumstances and the actual aims of INP explain some of the differences to be found in the projects for reform of the 1900 Law, presented to Parliament in 1910 and 1916 by the then ministers of the Interior, Fernando Merino and Joaquín Ruiz Jiménez. In effect, unlike the Law of 1900, these projects contained a chapter III with the title 'Insurance against work accidents', and gave an important role in the development of this insurance to the mercantile insurance Companies and, above all, to the INP (2 2 'Proyecto de Ley leído por el Sr. Ministro de la Gobernación reformando la de accidentes del trabajo'. Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados, nº 28, 18-7-1910, Apéndice 4º. Proyecto de Ley leído por el Sr. Ministro de la Gobernación reformando la de accidentes del trabajo. Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados, nº 20, 5-6-1916, Apéndice 3º. ). Thus, in article 29 of that chapter it was stated that 'in INP there would be created a section of mutual insurance of work accidents completely independent from its other operations'. None of these projects was approved.

The 1922 law. New legislation on work accidents

New calls for work accident insurance

Although the objective of the INP was the establishment of a system of independent subsidized insurances, its strategy changed, following the economic-political-social crisis of 1917. Although Spain did not take part in the Great War, this crisis was the expression of the effects of this conflict and of the international revolutionary upsurge of the years 1917-1921, and it was particularly pronounced in the parliamentary, military, and union fields. Placed in this new critical situation, the outdated Spanish political system was forced to consider measures that, like social insurance, might promote social peace. This internal state of affairs, the scant development achieved by voluntary insurance among Spanish workers, and the value acquired by social insurance at national and international levels (Martínez, 1988, pp. 326-330; Martínez, 1990, pp. 277-281; Porras, 1999, p. 163) led the INP to set itself up as the defender of compulsory insurance. Its defence would be especially active after the experience of the influenza pandemic of 1918-19 (Porras, 1993 and 1994) and of the end of World War I (Cuesta, 1992, pp. 321-334). Likewise, workers' demands intensified between 1919 and 1922 (Cuesta, 1988, pp. 702-719), a period in which intense parliamentary activity was also registered on this subject. In fact, new projects for the reform of the 1900 Law were put forward, until at last the new Law of Work Accidents of 1922 obtained its approval.

On the other hand, in parallel and as it had happened in nearby countries such as France (Porras, 2004; Porras, forthcoming a), the occupational rehabilitation of work victims became very relevant in Spain in the wake of the impact caused by the great number of disabled from the Great War, and the social value that their rehabilitation had received. True, Spain did not take part in the conflict, but it did participate in the general upheaval. In fact, an important change of attitude took place among Spanish doctors, as some of them felt attracted by the apparent possibilities offered by the development of prosthetics, restorative surgery, and new specialties -such as orthopaedics and traumatological surgery (Cooter, 1993) or rehabilitation (Climent, 2001; Águila, 2000; Águila et al., 2001a and 2001b)- in the approach to workplace victims. Specifically, Antonio Oller (1887-1937) and Manuel Bastos Ansart (1887-1973) would be two of these doctors who were especially interested in the subject of the professional rehabilitation of the work disabled. The interest of the former, the leading character in charge of the creation and introduction of Occupational Medicine in Spain (Bachiller, 1984), was linked to the experience that he acquired in the treatment of work victims during his stay in Switzerland. This country, like Germany, Belgium, or Italy, had attended to the rehabilitation of work disabled before the Great War (Vitoria, 1974-75; Oller, 1924, p. 128; Oller, 1923, p. 2), creating specialized centres. Oller was in charge of one of them prior to 1918, the moment when this doctor first called attention to the value of 'the rehabilitation of the disabled'. In his opinion, this was a 'most essential factor neglected by the State', since 'well-directed' rehabilitation could '[transform] a useless man into a capable worker'. Hence his conviction that it was 'time that the Institute of Social Reforms took care of this subject' (Oller, 1918, p. 380).

The 1919 project for the reform of the 1900 Law of Work Accidents, which was not approved, echoed Oller's demand since, although it did not include workers' demands for the establishment of compulsory work accident insurance, it did incorporate the rehabilitation of the work disabled (3 3 'Proyecto de Ley leído por el Sr. Ministro de la Gobernación modificando la de 30 de enero de 1900 sobre accidentes del trabajo'. Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados, nº 34, 18-11-1919, Apéndice 3º. ). This would be carried out in the Special School for Work Disabled, created for that purpose and which would be located in the Vista Alegre estate, property of the then minister of the Interior.

Although this project did not get off the ground, it is an example of the existence of a new state of opinion concerning the problems of the work disabled and of the role that these disabled could play in Spanish society (4 4 Further evidence of this state of opinion is the speech of Álvaro López Núñez in the Ateneo in San Juan Despi in 1918 about the rehabilitation of workers disabled at work ('Cordialidad , 1918, pp. 273-275). ). In fact, unlike their French colleagues, Spanish doctors saw in the professional rehabilitation of work disabled an opportunity to improve their social position (Martínez-Pérez & Porras, 2003). A new appeal, made by Manuel Bastos on the occasion of the intensification of the War of Morocco in 1921 (5 5 I have dealt with the effect this conflict and the Great War had on the approach to the work disabled in Spain in Porras, (forthcoming b). ), was made in the debate on the new Law of Work Accidents of 1922. In the newspaper El Sol this military surgeon called for the creation of 'an institute of rehabilitation of the crippled and disabled from campaigns' (Bastos, 1921). Bastos justified his demand by the great importance that he believed an institute of these characteristics had 'not only to settle the sad consequences of the war, but also to undertake ( ) in peacetime the reconstruction of those crippled by industrial accidents'. That same year, in response to Bastos' request, the 'Clinic of Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation' was set up in the Military Hospital of Carabanchel (Madrid) (Bastos, 1924, p. 603; Torres, 1996, pp. 136-137).

In my view, the appeals made by Oller and Bastos should be seen as exponents of the new state of opinion then present among Spanish doctors in relation to the physically disabled, and of the attraction exerted on them by the new surgical and rehabilitative treatments widely used with the disabled of the Great War. This attraction was sufficiently positive, as we have seen, that they sought to obtain the setting-up of professional rehabilitation of work disabled in 1919, and, unlikely what happened in France, achieved its introduction with the new Law of Industrial Accidents of 1922. And the fact is that, as we can gather from the words of Bastos quoted above, and as this military surgeon would confess years later, Spanish doctors were aware of the small number of military disabled needing rehabilitation. So that, in order to be able to find a public on whom to apply the new therapeutic resources it was necessary to 'discover invalids' (6 6 Italics in the original. ) to rehabilitate; and they saw that this could easily be done 'among the victims of work accidents' (Bastos, 1936, p. 211).

The establishment of the professional rehabilitation of the work disabled

However, the 1922 law did not include the requested compulsory work accident insurance, but it did include rehabilitation. So Article 23 stated that 'a special service of rehabilitation of the work disabled will be organized by the Ministry of Employment' (7 7 'Ley sancionada por S. M. modificando la de Accidentes del Trabajo de 30 de enero de 1900', Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados, nº 1, 1-3-1922, Apéndice 8º. ). This order was embodied in the creation of the requested Institute for the Vocational Rehabilitation of Work related Disabled (IRPIT), assigning it such responsibilities as functional retraining, occupational rehabilitation, and the social trusteeship of the disabled. In order to fulfil these functions, the Institute was divided into three sections - medical, technical, and administrative - each with its own director and separate tasks. Thus, the medical section, directed by Oller, took care of the functional retraining clinic (Figure 1), clinical consultations, the laboratory and the orthopaedics and prosthetic service. The roles of the technical section (directed by the engineer César Madariaga) were vocational guidance, courses of occupational rehabilitation, factories, and agricultural operations (Oller, 1923, pp. 10-15; Oller, 1924, pp. 132-138; Instituto, 1932). With these characteristics and the obligation of the IRPIT to register all its disabled for the compulsory retirement pension and to pay the corresponding contributions to the INP, the Institute was inaugurated in June 1924 (ABC newspaper, 18-6-1924). However, its activities did not begin until 1925 (Mallart, 1928, pp. 5-15). From that moment on there was a suitable setting for the incorporation of the new medical technologies that were going to enable an approach to the problem of the work disabled from an angle which had been put off until then: that of social reintegration by means of their rehabilitation and vocational guidance (Figure 2). The work carried out at IRPIT achieved national and international recognition, receiving visits of doctors from different countries and members of the International Labour Organization (ILO) ('La vida del Instituto , 1925, pp. 86-97; Crónica del Instituto , 1929, pp. 375-381; Bachiller, 1985, p. 32). Emphasis was laid on the great role it played in the change of ideas and social attitudes to the capacities of the work disabled, as well as to disability in general and the way to combat it (Martínez-Pérez & Porras, 2003).



However, the economic crisis of 1929 had a negative effect on the activity of the IRPIT, since the rehabilitated patients of the Institute had problems in finding employment and in returning to their workplace (Instituto, 1932, pp. 37-38; Mallart, 1931, pp. 282-285; Bastos, 1936, pp. 210-213). Employers preferred workers who were not invalid or disabled and at that moment there were plenty of these. So that, as Bastos pointed out, 'adverse circumstances had completely distorted the work of the Institute' (Bastos, 1936, p. 213).

The Law of Work Accidents of 1932: The establishment of obligatory insurance and creation of the clínica del trabajo (occupational health clinic)

The situation of the IRPIT did not improve with the implementation of the new Law of Work Accidents of 1932 (8 8 'Ley promulgada modificando la de Accidentes del trabajo en la industria', Diario de Sesiones de las Cortes Constituyentes de la República española, nº 193, 1-3-1932, Apéndice 12. ) and the eventual establishment of compulsory work accident insurance. On the contrary, the activity of the Institute continued to deteriorate, being transformed on 5 June 1933 into the National Institute of Rehabilitation of Invalids (INRI). From that moment on their functions were the rehabilitation of all types of disabled (Palacios, undated, pp. 67-90 and Palacios, 1990, pp. 18-29), with the exception of work disabled. According to the new Law, the rehabilitation of the latter was organized around the compulsory work accident insurance and the newly created National Industrial Accident Insurance Fund. As a result, INP gained much greater importance. Specifically, 'functional retraining' was assigned to the Fund's 'Medical Service', which was run by the medical Consultancy of INP. In order to fulfil its aims, INP's Occupational Health Clinic was created, located in Madrid at the junction of the Avenues of Reina Victoria and Pablo Iglesias in a building provided by the Spanish Red Cross. Here were transferred the resources of the old Institute of Professional Rehabilitation (Jordana, 1933, pp. 10-19), and most of the doctors and of the professionals of the old IRPIT also joined (Clínica , 1933). In fact, the management of the new Clinic -equipped with a specialized hospital (an old ambition, mentioned in El Socialista, Torres, 1924), doctor's offices, a physiotherapy and mechanotherapy centre, and artificial limb factory- was in the hands of Oller, the former director of the medical section of IRPIT and adviser to INP (Instituto, 1934; Oller, 1935 and 1936).

INP's Occupational Health Clinic was from then on responsible for 'the functional retraining of workers suffering from work accidents, and the examination of previously declared disabilities'. It was also set up as a teaching and research centre at the service of the National Industrial Accident Insurance Fund (Instituto, 1935, p. 3). As we can see, the new institution, where functional retraining occupied an important place, was conceived as a key piece in order to provide more specialized attention to the work victim. The Clinic also made it possible to continue with the training of the new specialists in Occupational Medicine already undertaken by IRPIT ('Primer Curso ', 1929). We should see this more specialized health attention in the context of the process of health modernization undertaken during the Second Republic (Jiménez, 1994; Huertas, 1995). One way of obtaining a greater development of this specialized attention, I believe, may have been one of the new features incorporated in the new Law of 1932. I refer to the possibility of taking disciplinary measures against any worker who refused to undergo an operation deemed appropriate by the employer's doctor (Jordana, 1933, p. 18). According to article 72 of the regulation of the Fund, this action would be carried out by a specially appointed commission, after the examination of the worker by the Fund's medical service.

The outbreak of the Civil War and the conversion of the Occupational Health Clinic into a field hospital put an abrupt end to the development reached in this new stage of the occupational rehabilitation of work accident victims.

The rehabilitation of work invalids after the Civil War

The activity of the Occupational Health Clinic resumed in 1941 with the adoption of Temporary Incapacity Insurance (Clínica Nacional del Trabajo, 1959 and 1964), and continued until 1966, when all its staff were transferred to the Rehabilitation and Traumatology Service of the La Paz Hospital Complex (Climent, 2001, p. 247). It received a new impulse with the introduction of Compulsory Illness Insurance in 1944 and the recognition –at least in theory- of the rehabilitation and professional retraining of workers in the Insurance Decree of 1944 (Águila, 2000, pp. 102-103). However, the situation of penury in general, and in the Clinic in particular during the years of the post-war period limited the practical realisation of the measures of rehabilitation and professional retraining (Climent, 2001, pp. 251-253). As Palanca, Director General of Health at the time, graphically said years later, 'under those circumstances, one could not even think about the rehabilitation of the disabled' (Palanca, 1970, p. 92). In this sense, a very good example is what happened when poliomyelitis arrived and spread throughout Spain in the late forties. Faced by this situation, and under the influence of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and of the prominence given to the work and social retraining of invalids and disabled after World War 2 (Cooter, 2000, pp. 374-375), Spanish doctors called for the urgent adoption of state measures to combat disability. In their opinion, they believed it was necessary to create specialized retraining services, to publicize rehabilitation, and to establish a National Board to coordinate this fight. And under the Decree of 6 June 1949 the National Sanitary Campaign against Disability was set up. To this end, the National Board of the Campaign against Disability was created ('Decree of 6 June 1949 establishing the National Sanitary Campaign against Disability', BOE, 201, 20 July 1949). Nevertheless, this campaign had little practical effect, limiting itself more or less to two meetings of the Board, the creation of the Central Clinic of the Campaign against Disability and to a meagre budget to take care of the expenses of the campaign (Águila, 2000).

It was necessary to wait until the mid-fifties before the rehabilitation of invalids acquired a new impulse. This new situation was due to rather more favourable internal conditions, the increasing demand for this type of measures by the medical community, the continued presence of polio (Águila, 2000, p. 255 et seq.; Climent, 2001, pp. 253-256), as well as the role played by certain international organizations. In fact, the Conference of the ILO in June 1954 approved comprehensive recommendations on the professional rehabilitation of the work disabled (Gómez, 1959, pp. 264-265). Months later, the General Assembly of the Spanish Society of Surgery, Orthopaedics and Traumatology (SECOT), echoing these recommendations, called for the modification of the Law of Work Accidents. Their objective was to establish obligatory rehabilitation treatment for all the victims that, in the opinion of the doctor, might achieve some improvement in their work capacity. At the same time, SECOT called for the creation of specialized centres, the development of the fight against disability, and the need for specialists (Gómez, 1959, p. 259). This demand was partly answered in the new Law of Work Accidents of 1956, which introduced in chapter VIII of its Regulations the modern concept of rehabilitation, and fixed the victims' rights and obligations (9 9 'Texto refundido de la Legislación de Accidentes del Trabajo. Decreto de 22 de junio de 1956', BOE, 15 de julio de 1956. ). In fact, the law contemplated the suspension of financial benefits if the worker, without due cause, refused to undergo medical or rehabilitative treatment.

In order to proceed to the application of the new law, a complete plan of the National Industrial Accident Insurance Fund was prepared. It included among other things the reorganization and extension of the National Occupational Health Clinic and other existing centres, as well as the creation of new specialized centres. The realization of this plan took place slowly over the following years. In fact, a proper development of Rehabilitation in Spain was not obtained until the sixties, having obtained its recognition as a medical specialty on 6 June 1969 (BOE, 19 July, 1969). To this new situation contributed not only the new political and economic conditions, but also the recorded epidemics of poliomyelitis (Águila et al., 2002) and, most particularly, the establishment of a Social Security System by means of the Basic Law of Social Security of 1963 and its reform in 1966. Indeed, the new services of Rehabilitation were organised around this system and the structures created (Águila, 2000, pp. 193-195, 365-366; Águila, et al., 2001 a and b). However, although the ultimate aim was the restoration of the injured to the workplace, these services basically developed medical rehabilitation, hardly touching the phase of occupational rehabilitation. This was left basically in the hands of the Employer's Mutual Associations (Águila, 2000, pp. 149-150; Águila et al., 2001 a, p. 244). Still the real reintegration of the victims to the world of work after their rehabilitation was difficult. The later adoption of some legislative measures was necessary, such as the granting of assistance to 'Centres of Protected Employment for Disabled Workers' (Ministerial Order 7 November 1968) or the introduction of quotas for disabled workers. It was also necessary to carry out publicity campaigns to overcome the prejudices against the work capacity of the rehabilitated disabled and to obtain their progressive incorporation into the labour market.

Conclusion

In view of the foregoing, it seems clear that the inclusion of the rehabilitation of work disabled for the first time in the Law of 1922 was related to the important social role played by these measures during the Great War, and the demands afterwards made by some Spanish doctors. On the other hand, it may be said that the establishment of the Compulsory Work Accident Insurance in the Law of 1932 granted greater prominence to INP and favoured a greater degree of specialization in the subject of rehabilitation of the work disabled, reaching yet higher levels with the later establishment of a Social Security System. However, the important roles played by some Spanish doctors and by INP in the introduction and realization of the rehabilitation of work disabled in the first half of the twentieth century were modified by the political, social, economic and sanitary conditions that coincided at each moment.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Submitted on Fabruary 2006.

Approved on May 2006.

  • Águila Maturana, Ana María et al. 2001a La asistencia rehabilitadora en España durante el período previo a su reconocimiento oficial (1949-1969). Rehabilitación (Madr), v. 35, n. 4, p. 242-8.
  • Águila Maturana, Ana María et al. 2001b El desarrollo de la Rehabilitación en España (1949-1969). Rehabilitación (Madr), v. 35, n. 3, p. 179-85.
  • Águila Maturana, Ana María et al. 2000 El debate médico en torno a la Rehabilitación en España (1949-1969), Tesis Doctoral. Facultad de Medicina. Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
  • Águila Maturana, Ana María et al. 2002 Influencia de las epidemias de poliomielitis sobre la rehabilitación en España (1949-1969). Rehabilitación (Madr), v. 36, n. 1, p. 42-9.
  • Álvarez Junco, José 1985 La Comisión de Reformas Sociales: intentos y realizaciones. In: De la Beneficencia al Bienestar Social Cuatro siglos de acción social. Madrid: Siglo XXI. p. 147-53.
  • Álvarez Junco, José 1971 La Comuna en España Madrid: Siglo XXI.
  • Bachiller Baeza, Ángel 1985 La Medicina social en España (El Instituto de Reeducación y la Clínica del trabajo 1922-1937). Valladolid: Universidad de Valladolid Servicio de Publicaciones.
  • Bachiller Baeza, Ángel 1984 Historia de la medicina del trabajo en España: la obra científica del prof. Antonio Oller Martínez. Valladolid: Universidad de Valladolid Servicio de Publicaciones.
  • Barnes, Colin; Mercer, Geof; Shakespeare, Tom 2003 Exploring Disability A Sociological Introduction. (1. ed. 1999.) Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Bartolomé Pineda, Ángel et al. 2004 Historia de la Medicina del trabajo en España (1800-2000) Madrid: Fundación Mapfre Medicina.
  • Bastos, Dr. 1921 Problemas de la guerra. La rehabilitación de inutilizados. El Sol, 8 de septiembre.
  • Bastos, Manuel 1936 El problema de los inválidos visto a través de observaciones hechas en el Instituto Nacional de Reeducación. Anales de la Real Academia Nacional de Medicina, n. 55, p. 209-32.
  • Bastos Ansart, Manuel 1924 Los resultados de la Cirugía de rehabilitación en nuestros inválidos de guerra. Anales de la Real Academia Nacional de Medicina, n. 44, p. 602-10.
  • Bernabeu Mestre, Josep; Perdiguero Gil, Enrique; Zaragoza Ferrández, Paula 2000 Desarrollo histórico de la Salud laboral. In: Benavides, F. G.; Ruiz-Frutos, C.; García, A. M. (coord.) Salud Laboral Conceptos y técnicas para la prevención de riesgos laborales. 2. ed. Barcelona: s.n. p. 71-81.
  • Bernabeu Mestre, Josep; Perdiguero Gil, Enrique; Zaragoza Ferrández, Paula 1992 Medicina del Trabajo en España. Aspectos normativos: de la Inspección a la Inspección médica del trabajo (1906-1935). In: Huertas, R.; Campos, R. (ed.) Medicina social y clase obrera en España (siglos XIX y XX) 2 v. Madrid: FIM. v. 1, p. 295-320.
  • Calle Velasco, MŞ Dolores de la 1989 La Comisión de Reformas Sociales, 1883-1903 Política social y conflicto de intereses en la España de la Restauración. Madrid: Ministerio de Trabajo y Seguridad Social.
  • Clínica Nacional del Trabajo 1964 Memoria de la Clínica Nacional del Trabajo Los años 1958 a 1963. Madrid: INP.
  • Clínica Nacional del Trabajo 1959 Memoria del XXV aniversario (1933-1958) Madrid: INP.
  • Cooter, Roger 2000 The Disabled Body. In: Cooter, R.; Pickstone, J. (ed.) Medicine in the Twentieth Century Amsterdam: Rodopi. p. 367-83.
  • Cooter, Roger 1993 War and Modern Medicine. In: Bynum, W. F.; Porter, R. (ed.) Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine London/New York: Routledge. 2 v. t. 2, p. 1536-73.
  • Cooter, Roger; Luckin, Bill (ed.) 1997 Accidents in history: injuries, fatalities and social relations. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
  • Cordialidad nacional y regional 1918 Anales del INP, v. 10, p. 273-5.
  • Crónica del Instituto – 1929 Memorias del Instituto de Reeducación Profesional de Inválidos del Trabajo, 1928 v. 5-6, p. 375-81.
  • Cuesta Bustillo, Josefina 1992 Un punto de encuentro entre medicina y trabajo debates sobre el seguro de enfermedad durante los años veinte, en España. In: Huertas, R.; Campos, R. (ed.) Medicina social y clase obrera en España (siglos XIX y XX) 2 v. Madrid: FIM, v. 1, p. 321-47.
  • Cuesta Bustillo, Josefina 1988 Hacia los seguros sociales obligatorios La crisis de la Restauración. Madrid: Ministerio de Trabajo y Seguridad Social.
  • Doriguzzi, Pascal 1994 L'Histoire politique du Handicap De l'infirme au travailleur handicapé. Paris: L'Harmattan.
  • Gómez Paniagua, Héctor 1959 Los accidentes del trabajo, el seguro de riesgos profesionales y la rehabilitación de los inválidos Tesis Doctoral inédita, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Económicas, Universidad de Madrid.
  • Hamonet, Claude 2004 Les personnes handicapées Paris: PUF.
  • Huertas García-Alejo, Rafael 1995 Organización sanitaria y crisis social en España Madrid: FIM.
  • Instituto de Reeducación Profesional 1932 El Instituto de Reeducación profesional y sus principales actividades Desde la reforma de la Ley de accidentes del trabajo en 1922 hasta la presentación a las Cortes de la nueva reforma en 1932. Madrid: Publicaciones del Instituto de Reeducación Profesional.
  • Instituto de Reformas Sociales 1906 El Instituto Nacional de Previsión y sus relaciones con entidades similares Madrid.
  • Instituto Nacional de Previsión 1935 Reglamento de la Clínica del Trabajo del Instituto Nacional de Previsión Madrid: Impr. Suc. M. de Minuesa de los Ríos.
  • Instituto Nacional de Previsión 1934 La Clínica del Trabajo del Instituto Nacional de Previsión (1. ed. Madrid: Gráfica Administrativa. 1933.) 2. ed. Madrid: Unión Poligráfica.
  • Jiménez Lucena, Isabel 1994 Cambio político y alternativas sanitarias: el debate sanitario en la II República. Tesis doctorado, Málaga, Universidad de Málaga.
  • Jordana de Pozas, Luís 1933 La Caja Nacional de Seguro de Accidentes del trabajo y sus primeros resultados Madrid: Imprenta y Encuadernación de los Sobrinos de la Sucesora de M. Minuesa de los Ríos.
  • La vida del Instituto 1925 Memorias del Instituto de Reeducación Profesional de Inválidos del Trabajo, n. 2, p. 86-97.
  • Madariaga, César 1931 La Reeducación Profesional Madrid: M. Aguilar.
  • Mallart, José 1931 La colocación de los inválidos del trabajo. Revista de organización científica, p. 282-5.
  • Mallart, José 1928 La reeducación profesional de los inválidos del trabajo en España Madrid: Talleres gráficos de E. Jiménez.
  • Martínez Pérez, José 2001 Medicina del Trabajo y prevención de la siniestralidad laboral en España (1922-1936). In: Martínez Pérez, J.; Atenza, J. (coord.) El Centro Secundario de Higiene Rural de Talavera de la Reina y la Sanidad Española de su tiempo Toledo: JCCM. p. 235-57.
  • Martínez Pérez, José 1998 Moldeando el estilo de vida del trabajador: la educación para la Higiene y la Seguridad laborales en España (1922-1936). In: Montiel, L.; Porras, I. (coord.) De la responsabilidad individual a la culpabilización de la víctima. El papel del paciente en la prevención de la enfermedad Aranjuez/Madrid: Doce Calles. p. 125-37.
  • Martínez Pérez, José 1994 La Organización Científica del Trabajo y las estrategias médicas de seguridad laboral en España (1922-1936). Dynamis, n. 14, p. 131-58.
  • Martínez Pérez, José 1992 La Salud Laboral en la II República: la actitud de los médicos ante la Ley de Accidentes de Trabajo. In: Huertas, R.; Campos, R. (ed.) Medicina social y clase obrera en España (siglos XIX y XX), 2 v. Madrid: FIM. v. 1, p. 349-69.
  • Martínez-Pérez, José; Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel 2003 Changing social perception of people with disabilities: occupational medicine and the problem of accidents in the work place in Spain (1900- 1936). Comunicación presentada al Congreso de la EAHMH (Oslo, 3-7 de septiembre).
  • Martínez Quintero, Esther 1990 El nacimiento de los seguros sociales, 1900-1918. In: Historia de la acción social en España Beneficencia y Previsión. Madrid: Ministerio de Asuntos sociales. p. 241-86.
  • Martínez Quintero, Esther 1988 La crisis de 1917 y la reorganización de los seguros. In: Montero García, F. Orígenes y antecedentes de la previsión social Madrid: Ministerio de Trabajo y Seguridad Social. p. 326-30.
  • Medina Domenech, Rosa; Menéndez Navarro, Alfredo 2004a Tecnologías médicas, asistencia e identidades: nuevos escenarios históricos para el estudio de la interacción pacientes-médicos. In: Martínez Pérez; J.; Porras Gallo, MŞ I.; Samblás Tilve, P.; Del Cura, M. (coord.) La Medicina ante el nuevo milenio: una perspectiva histórica. Cuenca: Edics. de la UCLM. p. 697-711.
  • Medina Domenech, Rosa; Menéndez Navarro, Alfredo 2004b Tecnologías médicas en el mundo contemporáneo: una visión histórica desde las periferias. Introducción. Dynamis, n. 24, p. 15-26.
  • Medina, Rosa; Rodríguez Ocaña, Esteban 1992 La Medicina en la Organización Científica del Trabajo. El Instituto de Orientación Profesional (Psicotécnico) de Barcelona (1917-1936). In: Huertas, R.; Campos, R. (ed.) Medicina social y clase obrera en España (siglos XIX y XX) 2 v. Madrid: FIM. v. 1, p. 459-90.
  • Menéndez Navarro, Alfredo; Rodríguez Ocaña, Esteban 2003 From 'Accident Medicine' to 'Factory Medicine': Spanish Occupational Medicine in Twentieth Century. In: Grieco, A.; Fano, D.; Carter, R.; Iavicoli, S. (ed.) Origins of Occupational Health Associations in the World Amsterdam: Elsevier. p. 207-16.
  • Menéndez Navarro, Alfredo; Rodríguez Ocaña, Esteban 1992 Aproximación al estudio de los recursos asistenciales sanitarios en los establecimientos minero-metalúrgicos españoles a comienzos del siglo XX. In: Huertas, R.; Campos, R. (ed.) Medicina social y clase obrera en España (siglos XIX y XX) 2 v. Madrid: FIM. v. 1, p. 263-93.
  • Ministerio de la Gobernación 1892 Asilo de Inválidos del Trabajo: Instrucción General y Reglamento. Madrid: Imprenta Ricardo Rojas.
  • Montero García, Feliciano 1988 Orígenes y antecedentes de la previsión social Madrid: Ministerio de Trabajo y Seguridad Social.
  • Oller, Antonio 1936 Memoria de la Clínica del Trabajo del Instituto Nacional de Previsión, 1935 Madrid: Impr. Sobrinos de los Suc. de M. Minuesa de los Ríos.
  • Oller, Antonio 1935 Memoria de la Clínica del Trabajo del Instituto Nacional de Previsión, 1933-1934 Madrid: Impr. M. Minuesa.
  • Oller, Antonio 1924 La Reeducación profesional de los inválidos del trabajo en España y en el extranjero. Revista médica de Barcelona, n. 22, p. 127-38.
  • Oller, Antonio 1923 Estado actual de la reeducación profesional de inválidos del trabajo en España y en el extranjero. Los Progresos de la Clínica, v. 25, p. 1-15.
  • Oller, Antonio 1918 Algunos comentarios a la ley de accidentes del trabajo. Los Progresos de la Clínica, v. 12, p. 372-80.
  • Palacio Morena, Juan Ignacio 1988 La institucionalización de la reforma social en España (1883-1924) La Comisión y el Instituto de Reformas Sociales. Madrid: Ministerio de Trabajo y Asuntos sociales.
  • Palacios Sánchez, Julio 1990 La Institución pionera de la rehabilitación en España. Boletín del Real Patronato y Asistencia a personas con minusvalías, v. 15 (separata). Abril.
  • Palacios Sánchez, Julio s.a. Evolución histórica. In: Palacios Sánchez, J. (coord.) Historia del C.P.E.E. de Reeducación de Inválidos. Antiguo INRI Madrid: MEC-CPEE. p. 51-9.
  • Palanca, José A. 1970 Todos los que hemos oído In: Pasado, presente y futuro de la rehabilitación. Anales de la Real Academia Nacional de Medicina, v. 87, p. 39-103.
  • Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel 2004 El papel de la medicina y los médicos franceses en la reeducación profesional de los inválidos del trabajo al término de la Primera Guerra Mundial: primeras propuestas legislativas. In: Martínez Pérez, J.; Porras Gallo, MŞ I.; Samblás Tilve, P.; Del Cura, M. (coord.) La Medicina ante el nuevo milenio: una perspectiva histórica. Cuenca: Edics. de la UCLM. p. 511-33.
  • Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel 1999 Un foro de debate sobre el Seguro de enfermedad: las conferencias del Ateneo de Madrid de 1934. Asclepio, v. 51, n. 1, p. 159-83.
  • Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel 1994 La lucha contra las enfermedades 'evitables' en España y la pandemia de gripe de 1918-19. Dynamis, n. 14, p. 159-83.
  • Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel 1993 La profilaxis de las enfermedades infecciosas tras la pandemia gripal de 1918-19: los seguros sociales. Dynamis, n. 13, p. 279-93.
  • Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel (e.p., a) Medicine and the social reintegration of the working disabled into the workforce in France and Spain. In: Bourdelais, P.; Abreu, L. (ed.) The price of life: Welfare systems, social nets and economic growth. Phoenix.
  • Porras Gallo, MŞ Isabel (e.p., b) Medicina, guerra y reintegración social del inválido del trabajo en la España de la primera mitad del siglo XX. In: Actas del XIII Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Medicina Madrid.
  • Primer Curso Médico de Accidentes del Trabajo 1929 Reeducación Profesional. Memorias del IRPIT, v. 5-6, p. 378-9.
  • Reformas Sociales 1985 Información oral y escrita, 5 v. (Madrid 1889-1893, Reed. 1985).
  • Rodríguez Ocaña, Esteban 1993 Industrielle Gesundheitsgefährdung und Medizin in Spanien, 1850-1936. Eine Annäherung an den medizinischen Diskurs. In: Milles, D. (ed.) Gesundheitsrisiken, Industriegesellschaft und soziale Sicherungen in der Geschichte Bremerhave. p. 419-40.
  • Samaniego Boneu, Mercedes 1988 La unificación de los seguros sociales a debate La Segundad República. Madrid: Ministerio de Trabajo y Seguridad Social.
  • San Martín, Alejandro 1903 Comentarios quirúrgicos a la ley de accidentes del trabajo. Conferencia dada el 23 de mayo de 1903 en la Real Academia de Jurisprudencia Madrid: Imprenta de I. Calleja.
  • Stanton, Jennifer 1999 Making sense of technologies in Medicine. Social History of Medicine, v. 12, p. 437-48.
  • Stiker, Henri-Jacques 1997 Corps infirmes et sociétés Paris: Dunod. (Edición revisada de la obra publicada en 1982 con el mismo título por Éditions Aubier Montaigne, Paris).
  • Torres Fraguas, J. 1924 El Instituto de reeducación de inválidos y orientación profesional. El Socialista, 20 de junio.
  • Torres Medina, J. M. ) (coord. 1996 Gómez Ulla. Hospital Militar Central Cien años de Historia 1896-1996, Madrid: Ministerio de Defensa.
  • Vitoria, Manuel 1974-75 Escuela y talleres de aprendizaje para lisiados y tullidos. Asclepio, n. 26-27, p. 565-81.
  • *
    This work has been carried out within the project of the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science (Reference Nº BHA2001-2979-C05-05) and with the help of 'Grupos Emergentes' of the Department of Health of Castilla-La Mancha (File Nº GC04004); and its translation into English has been funded by the Centre for Biomedical Research (CRIB).
  • 1
    'Proyecto de Ley aprobado ( ) sobre accidentes del trabajo en los establecimientos industriales y mercantiles'.
    Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados,
    108, 18-1-1900, Apéndice 3º.
  • 2
    'Proyecto de Ley leído por el Sr. Ministro de la Gobernación reformando la de accidentes del trabajo'.
    Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados,
    nº 28, 18-7-1910, Apéndice
    . Proyecto de Ley leído por el Sr. Ministro de la Gobernación reformando la de accidentes del trabajo.
    Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados,
    nº 20, 5-6-1916, Apéndice
    .
  • 3
    'Proyecto de Ley leído por el Sr. Ministro de la Gobernación modificando la de 30 de enero de 1900 sobre accidentes del trabajo'.
    Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados,
    nº 34, 18-11-1919, Apéndice
    .
  • 4
    Further evidence of this state of opinion is the speech of Álvaro López Núñez in the Ateneo in San Juan Despi in 1918 about the rehabilitation of workers disabled at work ('Cordialidad , 1918, pp. 273-275).
  • 5
    I have dealt with the effect this conflict and the Great War had on the approach to the work disabled in Spain in Porras, (forthcoming b).
  • 6
    Italics in the original.
  • 7
    'Ley sancionada por S. M. modificando la de Accidentes del Trabajo de 30 de enero de 1900',
    Diario de las Sesiones de Cortes. Congreso de los Diputados,
    nº 1, 1-3-1922, Apéndice 8º.
  • 8
    'Ley promulgada modificando la de Accidentes del trabajo en la industria',
    Diario de Sesiones de las Cortes Constituyentes de la República española,
    nº 193, 1-3-1932, Apéndice 12.
  • 9
    'Texto refundido de la Legislación de Accidentes del Trabajo. Decreto de 22 de junio de 1956',
    BOE, 15 de julio de 1956.
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      23 Oct 2006
    • Date of issue
      June 2006

    History

    • Received
      Feb 2006
    • Accepted
      May 2006
    Casa de Oswaldo Cruz, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Av. Brasil, 4365, 21040-900 , Tel: +55 (21) 3865-2208/2195/2196 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
    E-mail: hscience@fiocruz.br