University of Michigan Surgeons, 1850-1970
Author: Horace Willard Davenport
Publisher: UM Libraries
Published: 1993
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Horace Willard Davenport
Publisher: UM Libraries
Published: 1993
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Horace Willard Davenport
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Published: 1999
Total Pages: 418
ISBN-13: 9780472110766
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Presents a fascinating view of medical education at the University of Michigan supplemented with rare photographs
Author: Joel Howell
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Published: 2017-09-07
Total Pages: 264
ISBN-13: 0472123424
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →A trailblazer in American medical education since 1850, the Medical School at the University of Michigan was the first program in the United States to own and operate its own hospital and the earliest major medical school to admit women. In the late nineteenth century, the School emerged as a frontrunner in modern scientific medical education in the United States, and one of the first in the nation to implement both required clinical clerkships and laboratory science as part of their curriculum, including the first full laboratory course in bacteriology. Decades later, the Medical School remained at the vanguard of medical education by increasing its focus on research, and these efforts resulted in world-changing breakthroughs such as field-testing the first safe polio vaccine, proposing a genetic mechanism for sickle cell anemia, inventing the fiber-optic endoscope, and cloning the gene responsible for cystic fibrosis. The Medical School’s history is not without its growing pains: alongside top-tier education and incredible innovation came times of stress with the broader University and Ann Arbor communities, complex expectations and realities for student diversity, and many controversies over curriculum and methodology. Medicine at Michigan explores how the School has dealt with changes in medical science, practice, and social climates over the past 150 years and illuminates the complicated interactions between economic, social, and cultural trends and medical education at the University of Michigan and across the nation. This book will appeal to readers interested in the history of medicine as well as current and former medical faculty members, students, and employees of the University of Michigan Medical School.
Author: Bruce Fye
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 2015
Total Pages: 705
ISBN-13: 019998235X
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →This study explores the parallel histories of the Mayo Clinic, the care of patients with heart disease, and specialization in cardiology during the twentieth century. Chapters are devoted to such technologies as open-heart surgery, coronary angiography, and echocardiography, and to the key individuals, instituions, and innovations that played vital roles in the technologies that transformed heart care.--From publisher description.
Author: Peter A. Swenson
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2021-11-30
Total Pages: 583
ISBN-13: 0300262876
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →An incisive look into the problematic relationships among medicine, politics, and business in America and their effects on the nation’s health Meticulously tracing the dramatic conflicts both inside organized medicine and between the medical profession and the larger society over quality, equality, and economy in health care, Peter A. Swenson illuminates the history of American medical politics from the late nineteenth century to the present. This book chronicles the role of medical reformers in the progressive movement around the beginning of the twentieth century and the American Medical Association’s dramatic turn to conservatism later. Addressing topics such as public health, medical education, pharmaceutical regulation, and health-care access, Swenson paints a disturbing picture of the entanglements of medicine, politics, and profit seeking that explain why the United States remains the only economically advanced democracy without universal health care. Swenson does, however, see a potentially brighter future as a vanguard of physicians push once again for progressive reforms and the adoption of inclusive, effective, and affordable practices.
Author: Frank W. Stahnisch
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2017-09-18
Total Pages: 156
ISBN-13: 1351741403
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →The forced migration of neuroscientists, both during and after the Second World War, is of growing interest to international scholars. Of particular interest is how the long-term migration of scientists and physicians has affected both the academic migrants and their receiving environments. As well as the clash between two different traditions and systems, this migration forced scientists and physicians to confront foreign institutional, political, and cultural frameworks when trying to establish their own ways of knowledge generation, systems of logic, and cultural mentalities. The twentieth century has been called the century of war and forced-migration, since it witnessed two devastating world wars, prompting a massive exodus that included many neuroscientists and psychiatrists. Fascism in Italy and Spain beginning in the 1920s, Nazism in Germany and Austria between the 1930s and 1940s, and the impact of the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe all forced more than two thousand researchers with prior education in neurology, psychiatry, and the basic brain research disciplines to leave their scientific and academic home institutions. This edited volume, comprising of thirteen chapters written by international specialists, reflects on the complex dimensions of intellectual migration in the neurosciences and illustrates them by using relevant case studies, biographies, and surveys. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of the History of the Neurosciences.
Author: University of Michigan. Dept. of Medicine and Surgery. Class of 1898
Publisher:
Published: 1901
Total Pages: 20
ISBN-13:
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