journal
Journals Journal of the History of Medi...

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37578803/ancient-conceptions-of-the-human-uterus-italic-votives-and-animal-wombs
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Claire Bubb
The numerous votive uteri found across the central Italian peninsula from the fourth to first centuries BCE are puzzlingly evocative of the human simplex uterus, which is visually distinct from the bicornuate uteri characteristic of most other mammals. However, human dissection is not attested for this time and place, while animal butchery was common. This article uses modern veterinary anatomical imagery to argue that animal uteri - specifically as they appear when pregnant - were indeed models underlying the votive depictions...
August 14, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37578763/joseph-e-murray-s-struggle-to-transplant-kidneys-failure-individuality-and-plastic-surgery-1950-1965
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hyung Wook Park
This paper offers a historical analysis of the American plastic surgeon and Nobel laureate Joseph E. Murray's kidney transplantation. After succeeding in the first kidney transplantation between monozygotic twins in 1954, he transplanted kidneys between genetically distinct people after X-radiation and immunosuppressants. Amid these achievements, however, Murray encountered numerous failures, which he thought were closely intertwined with each patient's physiological and pathological individuality. As he appropriated his expertise in plastic surgery for kidney transplantation, this individuality became a major issue that he had to cope with in his efforts to avoid failures...
August 14, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37561953/convenient-frailty-medical-contestations-of-asthma-and-hay-fever-in-african-americans-in-late-nineteenth-century-america
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ijeoma B Kola
Post-Emancipation medical and social science scholars extensively theorized Black susceptibility to illness, disease, and death. Most studies of late nineteenth-century medical ideas about the relationship between race and disease have highlighted the construction of medical beliefs that associated Black physical weakness with a proclivity to ill health. This study presents an alternate narrative, one where certain diseases - asthma and hay fever - reflected an opposing racialized understanding of disease that instead centered on White frailty...
August 10, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37452663/the-senator-and-the-sting-operation-politics-the-media-and-frank-moss-s-expos%C3%A3-of-medicaid-mills
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian Dolan, Stephen Beitler, Antoine Johnson
In September 1975, Frank Moss, an eighteen-year veteran of the Senate from Utah, donned the scruffiest clothes he could find and walked into a small clinic in New York that catered to Medicaid patients. Using a phony Medicaid card supplied to him by a New York District Attorney, he posed as a patient with symptoms he feigned to assess the quality of care he would receive. Appalled by what he experienced, he and a team of staffers from his office embarked on a four-state tour of what he termed "Medicaid mills," visiting more than 200 clinics in an undercover investigation that exposed alarming levels of provider fraud and abuse of the government health insurance system...
July 15, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37435903/-they-perished-in-the-cause-of-science-justus-von-liebig-s-food-for-infants
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caroline Lieffers
In 1867, controversy erupted when Jean-Anne-Henri Depaul, a Paris accoucheur, tested Justus von Liebig's new "food for infants" on four newborns, all of whom died within days. This paper examines the origins of Liebig's food, the debates in the French Academy of Medicine after Depaul's experiment, and how the events were discussed in the medical and popular presses. I argue that the controversy was shaped by a number of interconnected concerns, including the product's impracticality, disagreements within the field of chemistry, the riskiness of Depaul's experimentation, Liebig's problematic celebrity, the potential hubris of trying to emulate a natural product, and national tensions between France and Germany...
July 12, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37364178/primary-health-care-and-foreign-aid-a-tale-of-two-germanys
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Walter Bruchhausen, Iris Borowy
The Declaration of Alma-Ata remains one of the momentous documents of public health. Its origins lie both in postwar efforts to improve population health in low-income countries and in social medicine promoted decades earlier in Europe. For industrialized countries in East and West, Alma-Ata, therefore, should have provided health-related guidelines both for domestic and foreign policy, though political interpretations of the social components of medicine and health differed. Due to its unique history of ideologically informed division after 1945, Germany forms a fascinating case study...
June 26, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37315212/the-oldest-and-the-newest-of-nurses-nursing-and-the-professionalization-of-obstetrics-and-gynecology
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Daxenbichler
When in the late nineteenth century American physicians increasingly replaced midwives in the care of obstetrical and gynecological patients, they could do so only because they were aided by another emerging group of healthcare professionals: nurses. Nurses were instrumental in assisting physicians in the care of patients in labor and during recovery. They were also necessary for male physicians because the vast majority of nurses were women and their presence during gynecological and obstetrical treatments made it more socially acceptable for men to examine female patients...
June 14, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37307426/loose-attitudes-politics-of-self-knowledge-in-our-bodies-ourselves-and-the-house-of-god
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim Adams
Readers of Samuel Shem's medical satire The House of God (1978) have long worried about the bad attitude of his main characters: young male internal medicine trainees. This article examines the interns' atrocious affections, using the feminist classic Our Bodies, Ourselves (1973) as a counterweight to the masculinist perspective of House of God. These radically different critiques of United States medicine derive from a shared sociopolitical context and represent a historically specific response to the personal politics of sexual liberation and self-actualization in the 1970s...
June 12, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37210468/making-a-happy-hospital-emotional-investment-and-professional-identity-amongst-anglo-american-hospital-administrators
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Philip Begley
This article examines the place of emotion in modern hospital administration and the relationship between professional identities and emotional landscapes in the healthcare field. The focus is a broad emotional and philosophical investment that many administrators made in their work. In the United States and then in Britain, amidst rapid change in the practice and provision of health services, a new sense of professional identity emerged. This was often underpinned by a kind of emotional investment, one which had to be constructed and cultivated...
May 20, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37209117/attending-to-emotions-as-both-caregivers-and-historians
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Scott H Podolsky
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 20, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37208952/wounded-healers-abortion-and-the-affective-practices-of-pro-life-health-care
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Megann Licskai
For some post-Roe abortion providers, the emotional cost of their abortion practice was untenable. By the 1980s, former abortion providers had become prominent anti-abortion advocates. Although physicians such as Beverly McMillan grounded their pro-life conversions in medical technologies and "fetological" research, affective connections to the fetus animated their activism. McMillan explained that through abortion practice, the medical profession - her vocation - had gone astray, and her pro-life activism was the cure to the resulting emotional damage...
May 19, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37208908/correction-to-history-s-toolbox-in-health-professions-education-one-skill-based-session-on-social-determinants-of-health
#32
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 19, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37158733/children-sexual-abuse-and-the-emotions-of-the-community-health-practitioner-in-england-and-wales-1970-2000
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ruth Beecher
A survivor of child sexual abuse felt that doctors missed opportunities to notice her distress when, at fourteen, she had an unexplained illness that lasted for a year. The cause, she wrote, was "explained by Doctors as psychological, but nobody questioned further. WHY??? … If adults don't listen[,] then we have no one to turn to." For decades, community health practitioners have been identified as an important group in protecting children from maltreatment, but survivor testimony and agency statistics demonstrate that they rarely receive verbal disclosures or recognize the physical or behavioural warning signs of sexual abuse...
May 9, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37141402/screening-as-governmental-technology-the-nationwide-collection-of-mental-health-data-on-students-in-south-korea
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Youjung Shin
In 2012, all the students in South Korea from elementary to high school went through the government's mental health screening. From a historical perspective, this paper examines why and how the Korean government launched the mass screening of students' mental health and what enabled this nationwide data collection. By analyzing its driving forces, this paper reveals the ecology of power being forged at the intersection of multinational pharmaceutical companies, mental health experts, and the Korean government in the 2000s...
May 4, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37103263/physiology-vitalism-and-the-contest-for-body-and-soul-in-the-antebellum-united-states
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonathan D Riddle
In the early nineteenth century, physiology became an increasingly popular and powerful science in the United States. Religious controversy over the nature of human vitality animated much of this interest. On one side of these debates stood Protestant apologists who wedded an immaterialist vitalism to their belief in an immaterial, immortal soul - and therefore to their dreams of a Christian republic. On the other side, religious skeptics argued for a materialist vitalism that excluded anything immaterial from human life, aspiring thereby to eliminate religious interference in the progress of science and society...
April 27, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37068065/regendering-childbirth-catholicism-medical-activism-and-birth-preparation-in-post-war-poland
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Agata Ignaciuk, Agnieszka Kościańska
This article examines the work of the gynecologist Włodzimierz Fijałkowski, the key promoter of preparation for childbirth in Communist and early democratic Poland. From the late 1950s until the 1990s, Fijałkowski developed a childbirth preparation training protocol that served as an inspiration for childbirth preparation schools across the country. Through analysis of Fijałkowski's publications in medical journals, books aimed at both professional and lay readers, visual aids for childbirth training, and archival material, we demonstrate that a specific vision of gender roles and relationships lay at the core of Fijałkowski's psychoprophylactic project...
April 17, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36809553/histories-of-medieval-plague-in-renaissance-italy
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Craig Martin
During the sixteenth century, Italian scholars revised their conception of the field of history so that its purposes went beyond providing political and morally edifying narratives. These scholars contended that history must also account for culture and nature in an encyclopedic fashion. In the same years, numerous newly available texts from antiquity, the Byzantine empire, and the Middle Ages provided insight into the character of earlier outbreaks of plague. Italian physicians, embracing new visions of the field of history, the culture of humanism, and an inductivist epistemology, used these texts to argue that there were continuities among ancient, medieval, and Renaissance epidemics...
April 7, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37011106/visualizing-bdsm-and-aids-activism-archiving-pleasures-sanitizing-history
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ketil Slagstad
The visual archive of AIDS and fetish activism is a rich resource for studying interlinkages between art and science, activism and public health, politics and medicine, pleasure and sexual health prevention. This article explores AIDS and fetish activism imagery from the first two decades of the Norwegian AIDS crisis. Interrogating the materiality and visual context of images - photographs, posters, flyers, and safer sex instructions - it maps out visualization practices in leather, BDSM and AIDS activism. AIDS and fetish imagery made some bodies, pleasures, and political goals visible - and rendered others unseen...
April 3, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36905372/the-professors-professor-the-american-students-of-august-krogh
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allan Lyngs
This paper examines the creation and development of an international social network between physiologists in Denmark and the United States in the period 1907-1939. At the center of the network was the Danish physiologist and 1920 Nobel Laureate August Krogh and his Zoophysiological Laboratory at the University of Copenhagen. In total, sixteen Americans were visiting researchers at the Zoophysiological Laboratory until 1939, and more than half of them were at some point in their career affiliated with Harvard University...
March 11, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36879417/clio-in-the-operating-theatre-historical-research-emotional-health-and-surgical-training-in-contemporary-britain
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Agnes Arnold-Forster
Drawing on my experience working as a postdoctoral research and engagement fellow on the Wellcome Trust-funded project, Surgery & Emotion, this article reflects on this innovative model of historical research and professional engagement, explores the challenges posed by crossing disciplinary boundaries, and interrogates the practical and theoretical utility of bringing historical research into the operating theatre. How do surgeons specifically engage with the history of their profession? What can the history of emotions offer to the training of medical students and surgeons? What obstacles interfere in this type of cross-disciplinary engagement? What peculiar opportunities and challenges do the United Kingdom higher education system and National Health Service pose to the teaching of medical history in clinical settings? Bringing Clio into the operating theatre provides surgeons with an alternative narrative to that which they have come to expect about the emotions they ought to feel and express in their work...
March 4, 2023: Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
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