With the holidays looming before us, this, from 1877, seems a very pertinent question:
Primary Source Sets
MHL Collections
Reference Shelves
With the holidays looming before us, this, from 1877, seems a very pertinent question:
We’re preparing our first ever annual report for the MHL, Inc. and I’ve been spending some time finding and editing images. I’ve always liked the look of page collages so I’ve been playing around seeing what I can make up using pages from our most downloaded volumes.
Stay tuned for the report itself!
It looks more like a preventative to the common cold to me, but I very much enjoy the poise of the gentleman on the front cover.
A 1923 physical education manual from Paraguay: Manual de educación física del niño y del adolescente : (Escuela francesa).
A 1476 manuscript of Guglielmo del Saliceto:
Sold to Satan! (In this case, Satan is HH Holmes, the murderer made famous again by Erik Larson’s Devil in the White City.)
~Post courtesy Stephen Novak, Head, Archives & Special Collections, Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library, Columbia University.
Taking Doctors’ Histories: Thirty Years of Interviews with VP&S Alumni
When: Wednesday, November 13: Lecture at 6pm followed by a reception & book signing
Where: Conference Room 103-A, the Knowledge Center at the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library
Hammer Building, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, 701 West 168th St. at Ft. Washington Ave.
Free and open to the public; registration required: https://cumc.columbia.libcal.com/event/5795338
The Columbia University Health Sciences Library is pleased to host Peter Wortsman, long-time writer for Columbia Medicine, award-winning author of fiction, travel memoirs, stage plays, and an esteemed translator, on November 13 when he’ll recount his 31 years interviewing some of America’s most noteworthy MDs in a wide variety of fields who have made a fundamental difference in the lives of others – all graduates of Columbia’s Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons.
Based on his recent book, The Caring Heirs of Doctor Samuel Bard: Profiles of Selected Distinguished Graduates of Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, (Columbia University Press, 2019), Wortsman will recap the experience of interviewing such innovative thinkers and doers as Nobel laureates Baruch Blumberg and Robert Lefkowitz; late pediatrician and political activist Benjamin Spock; surgeon and NASA astronaut Story Musgrave; surgeon and former Columbia University trustee, the late Kenneth Forde; former NYC Commissioner of Health, Mary Bassett, and pediatrician-turned refugee health advisor-turned substance abuse specialist, the late Davida Coady, among many others.
In the words of one of Wortsman’s distinguished subjects, child psychiatrist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Robert Coles ’54: “All interviews, one hopes, become jointly conducted.” A medical mosaic of sorts, these doctors’ histories invert the stethoscope, as it were, permitting the reader to listen in on the heartbeat of American medicine at its best.
Attendees are invited to remain for a reception and book signing by Mr. Wortsman. The lecture is free and open to the public but advance registration is required: https://cumc.columbia.libcal.com/event/5795338
~Post courtesy Dawne Lucas, Technical Services Archivist, Wilson Special Collections Library, UNC-Chapel Hill.
Please join us for our next Bullitt History of Medicine Club lecture on October 15!
Tuesday, October 15, 2019 12:00 NOON-1:00 PM Bondurant 2025 (light lunch provided)
Artificial Hearts: A Controversial Medical Technology and Its Sensational Patient Cases from Haskell Karp to Dick Cheney
Shelley McKellar, PhD, Hannah Professor in the History of Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada
Today artificial hearts are a clinical reality after decades of contentious development. Former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney told reporters that it ‘saved his life’ when asked about living with an artificial heart device for 20 months in 2010-2012. But not all artificial heart implant patients, like Haskell Karp and Barney Clark, enjoyed such successful recoveries.
In this presentation, McKellar examines the clinical use of artificial hearts since the 1960s, situating the triumphant narrative of this technology and its ‘resurrectionist capacity’ alongside technical device challenges and difficult patient experiences. Who would not want a life-saving, off-the-shelf device fix for a loved one dying of heart failure? The appeal was the promissory nature of artificial hearts as a life-sustaining treatment, a medical technology that might alter the usual course of events that when a person’s heart failed, that person died. McKellar argues that desirability—rather than feasibility or practicality of artificial hearts—drove the development of this technology. Artificial hearts were (and are) an imperfect technology, and its controversial history speaks to questions of expectations, limitations and uncertainty in a high-technology medical world.
Shelley McKellar, PhD is the Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine at the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University. She is also a Full Professor in the Department of History at Western University. She earned her PhD degree in History from the University of Toronto, after which she worked on a documentary history project at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, and then she accepted her academic position at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada. Her research focuses on the history of surgery, medical technology and the material culture of medicine. She is the author of several books and articles: her first book, entitled Surgical Limits, is a biography of Canadian surgeon Gordon Murray, one of Canada’s most prominent and controversial surgeons, who was also dubbed Canada’s ‘blue baby doctor’ for fixing congenital heart malformations in the era before open-heart surgery; she co-authored the book Medicine and Technology in Canada, 1900-1950, which highlights medical devices and practices in Canada, such as insulin, TB x-ray screening, and the use of iron lungs. Her most recent book, Artificial Hearts: The Allure and Ambivalence of a Controversial Medical Technology published by Johns Hopkins University Press, traces the potential and promise of this medical technology from the 1950s to present day. At Western University, she teaches history of disease courses that focus on epidemic outbreaks and social response to history students in the Faculty of Social Science. She also teaches the history of medicine, the medical profession, and related historical aspects of ‘doctoring’ to medical students in the medical school at Western University. She is also curator of the Medical Artifact Collection at Western – a small research and teaching university collection – that allows her to play with amputation saws, toothkeys, bloodletting instruments and more with her students.
About the Bullitt History of Medicine Club
Formed in 1953, the Bullitt History of Medicine Club is a student organization within the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s School of Medicine. The club promotes the understanding and appreciation of the historical foundations upon which current medical knowledge and practice is constructed, by encouraging social and intellectual exchanges between faculty members, medical students, and members of the community. The club’s annual McLendon-Thomas Award recognizes the best unpublished essay on an historical topic in the health sciences written by a UNC-Chapel Hill student. Please visit the Bullitt History of Medicine Club website for more information.
Apart from his pasting by William Cobbett, Rush is perhaps best known for his studies of the yellow fever epidemics that swept Philadelphia at the end of the eighteenth century.
We have many volumes of Rush’s medical writings available in our collection but I thought this one, written only a year after the major outbreak of 1793, merited a highlight.
New to us and the UKMHL: Thomas Couchman Barrett’s “receipt book.”