‘Yi-Tang Lin tells a most fascinating story on how crucial the networks of the experts of public health statistics were in China's close relationship with the predecessors of WHO, and how the lives and expertise of these Chinese statisticians were played out in the ROC and the PRC in the early WHO days during the Cold War.'
Tomoko Akami - The Australian National University
‘Thanks to Lin we know about how a new vocabulary, intertwining numerical data, indexes and political values, promoted by scholars, health workers and policy makers became essential for the validation of Global Health during the 20th century. A remarkable contribution to Global Health studies in China and beyond, past and present.'
Marcos Cueto - Fiocruz
‘Today, statistics and the language of numbers dominates global health thinking and practice. Yi-Tang Lin's ground-breaking study provides a much-needed history of how this came to be. Wide ranging, well researched and clearly written, Lin's book traces the emergence of statistics in global health over the course of the 20th century.'
Randall Packard - John Hopkins University
‘This impressive book offers both a history of the adoption of statistics by global health administrators and an investigation of how that adoption shaped and was shaped by international health professionals’ interventions in the Chinese-speaking world. … The book succeeds in bringing together the history of statistics with the history of international health, and is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of global health.’
Mary Augusta Brazelton
Source: The Social History of Medicine
‘Lin’s scholarship is superb throughout this book. Employing a wealth of archival material from three continents, she also fares well against the unenviable task of bringing the subject of statistics to life. … the remarkable richness of Lin’s material and the clarity of her presentation provide the historical foundations for the further theorization of statistics in medicine. This book deserves to be read widely by STS and global health scholars, anthropologists, and historians of all stripes.’
John Nott
Source: East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal