Very cool collaboration w the one & only medical historian #JoelHowell 🙌
Thank you @AGA_CGH for the invitation to publish on the history of endoscopy
It is just amazing how far we have come…
#DidYouKnow that U-M was the first university in the country to open its own hospital? 🏥 Discover how U-M’s first hospital changed history, in a talk by Dr. Joel Howell on February 8, 2024, at the Detroit Observatory!
Learn more: https://t.co/ZZ3aeigNXC
Busy beavers. It's amazing (and cool) to see what the beavers are doing. These trees that they are working on (and in some cases have chopped down) are surprisingly large, but perhaps necessary if you want to keep the dam intact through the winter!
If you haven't listened to this, you should. The transition between the two songs is a marvelous work of shared, surreal improvisatory genius. Enjoy! Grateful Dead - Scarlet Begonias / Fire on the Mountain 5/8/77 https://t.co/nb9Cl0WZKZ via @YouTube
Never before have I seen a stage being covered with dirt at intermission! But what followed at this UMS production was an amazing, energizing, thought-provoking, dynamic Rite of Spring, performed by a newly assembled company of dancers from more than a dozen African countries.
I watched this last night. It’s definitely quirky, and won’t be to everyone’s taste, but I found it weirdly enjoyable. Review: In ‘Textplay,’ Stoppard and Beckett Get Snarky, FWIW https://t.co/oZT17kRk6A
Fascinating article about Elizabeth Farrand, a pioneering 19th century U Michigan historian and physician. I’m proud to hold a chair named after this remarkable woman. ‘A truly noble woman’ https://t.co/9vXKMhCpO6
@SantaJOno "Washtenaw County Bike Rides" has maps, descriptions, suggestions, and even a bit of history for routes throughout the county. All routes are paved. UM Press: https://t.co/7nY0kfJdy7
New #HistoryOfMedicine from @JoelDHowell@mtlnmd @archives_Rx: From Individualized Interactions to Standardized Schedules: A History of Time Organization in U.S. Outpatient Medicine https://t.co/j163IHqJTK
This episode has fascinating insights into stage fright in a variety of settings - from public speaking to music performance to athletics - as well as ideas about how to manage it.
In this week’s episode, cognitive scientist @sianbeilock explains how falling back on our working memory can trigger stage fright: (3/3)
https://t.co/kMwUTw7Jp2
Welcome to the official account of the Journal of the History of Medicine & Allied Sciences!
Please follow for news of the journal, including CFPs and book reviews, and #histmed#histSTM content!