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SUMMARY:To Feed or Not to Feed: Medical Reversal in Food Allergy Prevention
DESCRIPTION:Bullitt Club Lecture Series Presents \nEdward Iglesia\, MD\, MPH\nClinical Fellow in Allergy/Immunology\, University of North Carolina Hospitals \nTo Feed or Not to Feed: Medical Reversal in Food Allergy Prevention \nMacNider Hall\, Room 18. \nLecture information: This lecture will review the recent history of food allergy prevention. This will include reviewing the epidemiology of food allergy\, the clinical science data supporting infant allergenic food\, and controversies regarding population-based recommendations for food allergy prevention. \nSpeaker information: Dr. Iglesia is currently a clinical fellow in allergy/immunology at UNC Hospitals. Originally from New Jersey\, he completed his undergraduate and medical education at Rutgers University and Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School\, respectively\, and subsequently trained at Vanderbilt University Medical Center for combined internal medicine/pediatrics residency. He has additional training in preventive medicine and public health through UNC’s preventive medicine residency\, where he completed his MPH in Health Care and Prevention.\nHis primary clinical and research interests are in clinical and population approaches to food allergy prevention.
URL:https://www.med.unc.edu/bhomc/event/to-feed-or-not-to-feed-medical-reversal-in-food-allergy-prevention/
LOCATION:MacNider Hall — Room 18\, 333 S. Columbia Street\, Chapel Hill\, NC\, 27514
ORGANIZER;CN="Dawne Lucas":MAILTO:dawne_lucas@unc.edu
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200128T120000
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SUMMARY:Disease and Social Restructuring: A Global Pandemic in Mao’s China
DESCRIPTION:Bullitt Club Lecture Series Presents \nXiaoping Fang\nAssistant Professor of History\, Nanyang Technological University\, and Fellow\, National Humanities Center\n \nDisease and Social Restructuring: A Global Pandemic in Mao’s China  \nMacNider Hall\, Room 18. \nLecture information: This talk analyzes the dynamics between disease and social restructuring during the global cholera pandemic in Mao’s China between the three most radical political events of the 1960s: the Great Leap Forward\, the Great Famine and the Cultural Revolution. In 1961\, El Tor cholera epidemic broke out on Sulawesi Island\, Indonesia\, becoming the seventh global cholera pandemic in recorded history. In China\, El Tor cholera first broke out in Guangdong Province in June 1961. Following a large-scale but clandestine government campaign\, the pandemic was contained in southeast coastal China by 1965. The 1961–1965 pandemic broke out and spread through southeast coastal China in a particular sociopolitical context when the Communist government committed to social restructuring to overcome the political crisis and reconsolidate the legitimacy of its rule. This sociopolitical change was intensified and complicated by the geopolitical roles of China within the international community at the peak of the Cold War. This research argues the global cholera pandemic was more than just a health incident in China—it was also\, more importantly\, a significant social and political exercise. \nSpeaker information: Xiaoping Fang is an assistant professor of history at the School of Humanities of the Nanyang Technological University\, Singapore and a Fellow of the National Humanities Center\, USA\, 2019-2020. His research interests focus on the history of medicine\, health\, and disease in twentieth-century China\, specializing in the post-1949 period. He has published articles in journals such as Modern China\, Medical History\, The China Quarterly\, and Modern Asian Studies. He is the author of Barefoot Doctors and Western Medicine in China (Rochester\, NY: University of Rochester Press\, 2012). He is currently completing a book manuscript on a global pandemic in Mao’s China.
URL:https://www.med.unc.edu/bhomc/event/disease-and-social-restructuring-a-global-pandemic-in-maos-china/
LOCATION:MacNider Hall — Room 18\, 333 S. Columbia Street\, Chapel Hill\, NC\, 27514
ORGANIZER;CN="Dawne Lucas":MAILTO:dawne_lucas@unc.edu
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