I'm thrilled that my new article has been published in @BHMjournal. It explores how Mao-era China responded to major epizootic/zoonotic diseases.
Please find the article:
https://t.co/hkaQoOksZ9
Congratulations (again!) to Nana Osei Quarshie, recipient of the @TheNACBS Walter D. Love Prize in History for “Psychiatry on a Shoestring.” Now in front of the paywall: https://t.co/XZ1PM0QKd7 #histmed
Do you need a little more reading for your holiday season? Catch up on the top ten most-accessed journal articles from October, including pieces from @JoDemocracy, @ACPAJCSD, @BHMJournal, @PoeStudies, and much more!
https://t.co/7CAKxsdSzq
Have you submitted your paper, panel, roundtable, workshop, or poster proposal for #AAHM2024 yet? We want to see you in Kansas City! Proposals are due Oct 2.
Nana Osei Quarshie’s “Psychiatry on a Shoestring: West Africa & the Global Movements of Deinstitutionalization” in @BHMjournal is co-winner of the Forum for the History of Human Sciences’ 2023 Article Prize #histmed
Open access thru Oct 13
https://t.co/BtZzvIjICw
Congratulations to Nana Osei Quarshie, co-winner of the Forum for the History of Human Sciences’ 2023 Article Prize for “Psychiatry on a Shoestring: West Africa & the Global Movements of Deinstitutionalization.” Now in front of the paywall: https://t.co/XZ1PM0QKd7 #histmed
In “Prenatal Care in the Rural United States, 1912–1929,” Nicole Holding discusses programs catalyzed by the Shephard Towner Act & details the challenges of the Children’s Bureau efforts to improve maternal/neonatal outcomes. #histmed https://t.co/i8IFbe6Vnx
In our latest issue, @katariinaparhi and @m_myllykangas examine the history of psychiatric epidemiology in "The History of Psychiatric Epidemiology in Finland: From National Needs to International Arenas, 1900s–1990s" (open access). #histmed https://t.co/vJL33zBSQN
What does an 1830s US vaccination campaign reveal about the role of Indigenous people in protecting their communities against variola? Find out in Seth Archer's "Vaccination, Dispossession, and the Indigenous Interior." #histmed
https://t.co/0Qs9zNUUkQ
In “’When I Think of It I Awfully Dread It’: Conceptualizing Childbirth Pain in Early America, Nora Doyle examines med texts & personal writings to trace how women’s descriptions of pain influenced the use of obstetric anesthesia. #histmed https://t.co/MF3s08z8SD
Natalie Köhle examines how a little-known Yuan period treatise was key to understanding the rise of phlegm as a major cause of illness in late Imperial China in "The Many Colors of Excrement: Galen and the History of Chinese Phlegm." #histmed
https://t.co/NtuqlL8BSX
"I think I lucked into cholera; it was a doable subject, an effective sampling device. But the next subject I was going to do didn't work out at all, so I want to throw that in for balance."
-Charles Rosenberg talks with Allan Brandt in BHM:
https://t.co/gPUPo5VXit
#histmed
Headed to Ann Arbor for the @aahmhistmed meeting this week? Have questions about journal publishing? Find us along with JHMAS & SHM eds @steerewilliams, @Dr_C_Thompson, @HarryYJWu, & Janet Greenlees, at the Meet the Editors roundtable Friday afternoon. #histmed
"Once Bitten: Mosquito-Borne Malariotherapy & the Emergence of Ecological Malariology within/beyond Imp. Britain" by Tom Quick makes a case for the central role that malariotherapy played in the dev of an ecological approach to malaria research/control: https://t.co/tinvmaWgrp.
In “‘Heroin Mothers,’ ‘Methadone Babies,’ & the Med Controversy over Methadone Maintenance in the Early 1970s”, Ulrich Koch breaks down how pregnant narcotic addicts & their infants became part of the politically charged debate over MMT. #histmed https://t.co/xP4L68G6PY