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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230404T120000
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DTSTAMP:20260420T072013
CREATED:20221219T200014Z
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UID:10000076-1680609600-1680613200@www.med.unc.edu
SUMMARY:CANCELED: The Healing Art: Early Modern Practices of Giving and Receiving Care
DESCRIPTION:Bullitt Club Lecture Series Presents\nMandy Fowler\nDoctoral student in English and Comparative Literature at UNC-Chapel Hill\n \nThe Healing Art: Early Modern Practices of Giving and Receiving Care \nLecture\nEarly Modern Economies of Care\, explores practices of giving and receiving care as they existed in sixteenth and seventeenth century England. In this presentation\, Mandy will share insights from their research as the 2022-2023 McLendon-Thomas Award Fellow with the Wilson Library Rare Books Collection. As a Fellow\, Mandy used a variety of materials\, including medical guides for physicians and household caregivers\, familial letters and legal documents\, and other printed or manuscript texts to better understand the complexities of caregiving from the perspectives of both the givers and receivers of care. Mandy’s research pays particular attention to the ways in which materiality and social dynamics influenced early modern approaches to care. \nSpeaker\nMandy is a doctoral student in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at UNC\, where they study early modern literature with an emphasis in the history of medicine\, materiality\, and domestic culture. They received the 2022-2023 McLendon-Thomas Award which supports scholarly research on the history of medicine that makes significant use of the rich and deep resources available in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s special collections\, home to the Health Sciences History Collection which is part of the Rare Book Collection.
URL:https://www.med.unc.edu/bhomc/event/the-healing-art-early-modern-practices-of-giving-and-receiving-care/
ORGANIZER;CN="Nadia Clifton":MAILTO:nadiana@live.unc.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230201T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230201T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T072013
CREATED:20221219T194811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230111T211145Z
UID:10000075-1675252800-1675256400@www.med.unc.edu
SUMMARY:“Panic in the Streets”: Historical Reflections on Fear-based Media Messaging During Acute Public Health Crises
DESCRIPTION:Bullitt Club Lecture Series Presents\nNancy Tomes\nDistinguished professor of History\, Stony Brook University \n“Panic in the Streets”: Historical Reflections on Fear-based Media Messaging During Acute Public Health Crises \nHybrid event\nIn-person: Mary Ellen Jones Building\, Room 3112 \nVirtual via Zoom: REGISTER for this event \nLecture\nIn public health\, fear-based campaigns are regarded (rightly so) with caution and concern because their side effects of stigma and scapegoating can be so toxic. Those worries have been shaped by an awareness of the formidable power of traditional media (newspapers\, radio\, TV) and now the “new” social media to amplify public health messaging in unexpected and undesirable ways. In this talk\, Tomes will present a brief history of what she terms the “panic problem” in American public health practice to stimulate a discussion of these questions: how do we motivate people to act in a public health crisis without inducing some degree of fear? Is there a place for healthy fear in public health messaging today and if so\, what would it look like?  \nSpeaker\nNancy Tomes is an American historian with a focus on the intersection between expert knowledge and popular understandings of the body and disease. She’s the award-winning author of four books\, including The Gospel of Germs: Men\, Women and the Microbe in American life\, (1998) about the popularization of the germ theory of disease\, and Remaking the American Patient which was awarded the prestigious Bancroft Prize in 2017\, which examines an in depth research in the popular yet largely unexamined concept origin of patients “shopping” for health care. She’s also developed “Medicine and Madison Avenue”\, a website in collaboration with Duke University Library’s Special Collections\, which explores the complex history of health related advertising. Her current research focus is on the history of psychiatry\, the impact of the Internet on doctor-patient interactions\, and a comparative look at the medical consumerism in other countries.
URL:https://www.med.unc.edu/bhomc/event/panic-in-the-streets-historical-reflections-on-fear-based-media-messaging-during-acute-public-health-crises/
LOCATION:Mary Ellen Jones Building\, Room 3112\, 116 Manning Drive\, Chapel Hill\, NC\, 27514
ORGANIZER;CN="Nadia Clifton":MAILTO:nadiana@live.unc.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201117T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201117T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T072013
CREATED:20200831T161314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201028T210037Z
UID:10000065-1605614400-1605618000@www.med.unc.edu
SUMMARY:The History of Anti-Vaccination
DESCRIPTION:Bullitt Club Lecture Series Presents \nElizabeth Salisbury\nMS2\, UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine \nThe History of Anti-Vaccination \nREGISTER for this event. \nLecture information: This talk investigates the origins of the anti-vaccination movement\, tracing its roots back to the smallpox vaccine. The anti-vaccination movement will be explored through three lenses: mandatory vaccinations and government control\, safety and efficacy\, and perceptions of risk. How did the anti-vaccination arguments we hear today develop and gain traction? What vaccine disasters have fueled the anti-vaccination movement? And\, finally\, as (future) healthcare providers\, how do we talk to vaccine-hesitant patients about vaccines? How do we combat the anti-vaccine movement? \nSpeaker information: Elizabeth Salisbury obtained her B.A. in Biology from Williams College in 2018\, where she also concentrated in Science and Technology Studies. At Williams\, she explored medicalization and the pharmaceutical industry in relation to ADHD and PMDD (premenstrual dysphoric disorder). After taking one year to pursue infectious disease research at the University of Massachusetts Medical School\, she matriculated to UNC School of Medicine\, from where she plans to graduate in 2023 with an M.D. She is currently researching perspectives on vaccination in the hopes of fostering better communication between healthcare providers and patients.
URL:https://www.med.unc.edu/bhomc/event/the-history-of-anti-vaccination/
ORGANIZER;CN="Nadia Clifton":MAILTO:nadiana@live.unc.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200915T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200915T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T072013
CREATED:20200824T204357Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200909T151620Z
UID:10000063-1600171200-1600174800@www.med.unc.edu
SUMMARY:Not Born Yesterday: Anti-Cancer Activism in Early 20th Century Latin America
DESCRIPTION:Bullitt Club Lecture Series Presents \nRaul Necochea\, PhD\nAssociate Professor\, Department of Social Medicine\, UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine \nNot Born Yesterday: Anti-Cancer Activism in Early 20th Century Latin America \nREGISTER for this event. \nLecture information: This lecture focuses on the case of Peru to explain the emergence and decline of the earliest Latin American coalitions of state health agencies\, physicians\, and lay people to broadcast the early signs of cancer. It also investigates why these previous efforts have gone unnoticed by contemporary U.S.\, European\, and even Latin American medical experts. \nSpeaker information: Raúl Necochea López obtained his Ph.D. in History from McGill University\, and held a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health before joining UNC’s Department of Social Medicine. He is broadly interested in the history of medicine and science\, sexual and reproductive health\, and Latin America. He is the author of A History of Family Planning in Twentieth Century Peru (UNC Press\, 2014); and of La Planificación Familiar en el Perú del Siglo XX (IEP and United Nations Fund for Population Activities\, 2016). He is presently researching the history of cervical cancer in the Andean region.
URL:https://www.med.unc.edu/bhomc/event/not-born-yesterday-anti-cancer-activism-in-early-20th-century-latin-america/
ORGANIZER;CN="Nadia Clifton":MAILTO:nadiana@live.unc.edu
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