Difference between revisions of "Moving Image:The secure society"

From Ephemeral Film Wiki
Moving Image:The secure society
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (1 revision imported)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 7: Line 7:
|forma=16mm
|forma=16mm
|year=1963
|year=1963
|up=
|up=Series:The Face of Sweden
|next=
|next=
|prev=
|prev=
Line 14: Line 14:
|pbrs=
|pbrs=
|heldby=IUL
|heldby=IUL
|desc=In this program, the narrator describes what the Swede receives in social welfare from the state. To illustrate, the film follows two young women through pregnancy --one case normal, the other complicated by serious illness. Swedes get free hospitali...
|synop=Sweden's social welfare system: What is it like to live in a country that provides free health care for pregnant women and free hospital stays for those with serious illnesses?
|link=https://media.dlib.indiana.edu/media_objects/c534g6007
|link=https://media.dlib.indiana.edu/media_objects/c534g6007
|len=0:29:25
|len=0:29:25
|ewid=71088
|ewid=71088
|director=Bo Bjelfvenstam
}}
}}
== Contributors ==
Bo Bjelfvenstam, Director
Steve Hopkins
Lennart Ehrenborg


== More Details ==
== More Details ==
* In this program, the narrator describes what the Swede receives in social welfare from the state.
* To illustrate, the film follows two young women through pregnancy --one case normal, the other complicated by serious illness.
* Swedes get free hospitalization during illness, while insurance covers and loss of income.
* In the particular case of births, while the mother is in the hospital, the home nurse association takes care of her children at a nominal fee.


;internal id :71088
;internal id :71088


;Summary
;Original Summary
:In this program, the narrator describes what the Swede receives in social welfare from the state. To illustrate, the film follows two young women through pregnancy --one case normal, the other complicated by serious illness. Swedes get free hospitalization during illness, while insurance covers and loss of income. In the particular case of births, while the mother is in the hospital, the home nurse association takes care of her children at a nominal fee. As the program continues, the topic is broadenedto cover the problems of others --for instance, the aged. The film concludes with a natural birth sequence --natural childbirth has been used in Sweden for ten years with great success --in which the healthy young woman we met at the beginning of the program watches her baby being born. Among the participants in this program is Ernst Michanek, State Secretary in Sweden’s Social Department, journalist, and Swedish representatives to the International Labor Organization and the Unite Nations.
:In this program, the narrator describes what the Swede receives in social welfare from the state. To illustrate, the film follows two young women through pregnancy --one case normal, the other complicated by serious illness. Swedes get free hospitalization during illness, while insurance covers and loss of income. In the particular case of births, while the mother is in the hospital, the home nurse association takes care of her children at a nominal fee. As the program continues, the topic is broadenedto cover the problems of others --for instance, the aged. The film concludes with a natural birth sequence --natural childbirth has been used in Sweden for ten years with great success --in which the healthy young woman we met at the beginning of the program watches her baby being born. Among the participants in this program is Ernst Michanek, State Secretary in Sweden’s Social Department, journalist, and Swedish representatives to the International Labor Organization and the Unite Nations.
;Physical Format  
;Physical Format  
Line 39: Line 53:
;Full Original Title
;Full Original Title
:The secure society
:The secure society
[[Category:Dec 4 Import]]

Latest revision as of 14:22, 25 May 2022

The secure society is a short film from 1963 released on 16mm. It is held in the IUL Moving Image Archive collection.

Sweden's social welfare system: What is it like to live in a country that provides free health care for pregnant women and free hospital stays for those with serious illnesses?

The secure society
Release date
1963
Running time
0:29:25
ewid: 621 | Fresh | | Up | step:1 || dopt: {{{dopt}}}

Contributors

Bo Bjelfvenstam, Director

Steve Hopkins

Lennart Ehrenborg

More Details

  • In this program, the narrator describes what the Swede receives in social welfare from the state.
  • To illustrate, the film follows two young women through pregnancy --one case normal, the other complicated by serious illness.
  • Swedes get free hospitalization during illness, while insurance covers and loss of income.
  • In the particular case of births, while the mother is in the hospital, the home nurse association takes care of her children at a nominal fee.
internal id
71088
Original Summary
In this program, the narrator describes what the Swede receives in social welfare from the state. To illustrate, the film follows two young women through pregnancy --one case normal, the other complicated by serious illness. Swedes get free hospitalization during illness, while insurance covers and loss of income. In the particular case of births, while the mother is in the hospital, the home nurse association takes care of her children at a nominal fee. As the program continues, the topic is broadenedto cover the problems of others --for instance, the aged. The film concludes with a natural birth sequence --natural childbirth has been used in Sweden for ten years with great success --in which the healthy young woman we met at the beginning of the program watches her baby being born. Among the participants in this program is Ernst Michanek, State Secretary in Sweden’s Social Department, journalist, and Swedish representatives to the International Labor Organization and the Unite Nations.
Physical Format
1 Film (0:29:25)
16mm
IUL Genres
Educational
Ethnographic
IUL Subject
Sweden--Social life and customs.
Full Original Title
The secure society