History of medicine and health care 2013 Honors College; History 1090; Sociology 1488; shrs 2906 coordinators: Jonathon Erlen, Ph. D. 648-8927-office


Pear, Robert. “U.S. Officials Brace for Huge Task of Operating Health Exchanges.” The New York Times, August 4, 2012



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Pear, Robert. “U.S. Officials Brace for Huge Task of Operating Health Exchanges.” The New York Times, August 4, 2012.


Collins, Sara R.; et. al. “Health care in the 2012 Presidential election: How the Obama and Romney plan stack up.” The Commonwealth Fund, October 2, 2012.
Neumann, Peter J.; and Chambers, James D. “Medicare’s enduring struggle to define “reasonable and necessary” care.” New England Journal of Medicine, 2012, 367(November 8): 1775-1777.
Baicker, Katherine. “The insurance value of Medicare.” New England Journal of Medicine, November 8, 2012, 367: 1773-1775.
Barlow, Kimberly K. “Health Sciences senior VC: Getting health care right.” University Times, 45 (8), 2012.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. “Obama administration moves forward to implement health care law, ban discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions.” November 20, 2012.
Mold, Alex. “Patients´ Rights and the National Health Service in Britain, 1960s–1980s.” American Journal of Public Health, 2012, 102(11): 2030-2038.

Abelson, Reed. “Health insurers raise some rates by double digits.” The New York Times, January 5, 2013.


Twedt. Steve. “Highmark faces new hurdle: Insurance department raises concern over finances in proposed affiliation with WPASH.” The Pittsburgh Post Gazette, February 23, 2013.
Huang, Elbert S.; and Feingold, Kenneth. “Seven million Americans live in areas where demand for primary care exceeds supply by more than 10 percent.” Health Affairs, March 2013.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “CMS issues proposed inpatient payment regulation: Policies to promote safety and program integrity among proposals.” Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. April 26, 2013.
Jackson, Harold. “Physician shortage must be addressed.” The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 5, 2013.
Kliff, Sarah. “Is this the end of health insurers?” The Washington Post, June 5, 2013.
Beck, Melinda. “More doctors steer clear of Medicare.” The Wall Street Journal, July 29, 2013.
Arroyave, Ivan, et.al. “The impact of increasing health insurance coverage on disparities in mortality: Health care reform in Colombia, 1998–2007.” American Journal of Public Health, 2013, 103(3): e100-e106.
November 11 Monday

History of American Medical Science: 1900-1950 PBS videotape Odyssey of Science

Flint, Austin, Jr. “The treatment of diabetes mellitus.” JAMA, 1884, 3(2): 29-39.


“The need for sanitary legislation.” JAMA, 1889, 12(25): 881-882.
Gaston, J. McF. “Fact vs. fiction touching yellow fever inoculation, with a record of results well authenticated.” JAMA, 1890, 14(12): 413-416.
“Has progress been made in the medicinal treatment of typhoid fever?” Reprinted from December 12, 1890 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 264(22): 2888.
“Can the gynecologist aid the alienist in institutions for the insane?” Reprinted from June 20, 1891 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 265(24): 3230.
“The relation of gynecology to neurology.” Reprinted from June 12, 1891, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1991, 265(22): 3026.
Cuddy, J. W. C. “The present status of material medica and therapeutics.” JAMA, 1891, 17(17): 620-623.
Mettler, L. Harrison. “A plea for the medical expert.” JAMA, 1892, 18(20): 605-608.
Hutchinson, Woods. “Darwinism and disease.” JAMA, 1892, 19(6): 147-151.

“Collateral organizations.” JAMA, 1893, 20(3): 79.


“A word on the modern use of the terms infection and contagion.” Reprinted from March 7, 1896, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1996, 275(12): 964.


Gilpin, Henry B. “Standardized drugs.” Reprinted from July 18, 1896, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1996, 276(4): 332.
“The slowness with which important medical discoveries are generally put to practical use.” . Reprinted from December 5, 1896, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1996, 276(24): 1932.
“Is diabetes increasing?” Reprinted from July 24, 1897, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 278(4): 344.
Munson, Edward L.. “The chemistry of the urine in diabetes mellitus. JAMA, 1897, 28(18): 831-836.

“Are our bacteriological methods complete and scientific?” Reprinted from October 9, 1897, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 278(13): 1058q.


“Is the apothecary shop doomed?” Reprinted from December 25, 1897, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 278(21): 1722.
“Some puzzling facts of immunity.” Reprinted from March 12, 1898, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 278(9): 640.
Brown, Caleb. “The use of electricity by the general practitioner.” Reprinted from October 22, 1898, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 280(14): 1226.
Thomas, Frederick S. “The stress of modern civilization as a factor in the causation of insanity.” Reprinted from December 10, 1898, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 280(22): 1902.
“Modern cytology.” Reprinted from October 21, 1899, issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 282(15): 1404.

Vaughan, Victor C. “Conclusions reached after a study of typhoid fever among the American soldiers in 1898.” . Reprinted from June 9, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(7): 852.


Fussell, M.H. “Blood examination: Its value to the general practitioner.” Reprinted from July 28, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 284(4): 411.
Shepard, Charles H. “Insanity and the Turkish bath.” Reprinted from March 10, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(10): 1259.
“”Value of vital statistics to medical science.” Reprinted from January 6, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 304(14): 1620.
“Medical libraries in smaller cities.” Reprinted from November 17, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 284(18): 2299.
Vaughan, Victor C. “Conclusions reached after a study of typhoid fever among the American soldiers in 1898.” . Reprinted from June 9, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(7): 852.
Smart, Charles. “Alleged insanity in the army.” Reprinted from October 27, 1901 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 284(15): 1901.
“The future of the medical profession.” Reprinted from July 16, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(2): 221.
Carrel, Alexis; et. al. “Cultivation of adult tissues and organs outside the body.” Reprinted from October 1, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(13): 1503.
Hill, Warren B. “Modern therapeutics.” .” Reprinted from October 1, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 283(2): 174.
“Salicylates in acute articular rheumatism.” Reprinted from June 24, 1911 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2011, 305(24): 2583.

McCoy, G. W. “’Experimental pellagra.” JAMA, 1917, (17): 1463.



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Hudson, Robert P. "The biography of disease: Lessons from chlorosis." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1977 (51): 448-463.
Carter, K.C. "The germ theory, beri beri, and the deficiency theory of disease." Medical History 1977 (21): 119-136.
Hudson, Robert P. "How diseases birth and die." Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 1977 (45): 18-27.
Kay, Lilly E. “W. M. Stanley’s crystallization of the tobacco mosaic virus, 1930-1940.” ISIS 1986 (77): 450-472.
Cassell, Eric J. "Ideas in conflict: The rise and fall (and rise and fall) of new views of disease." In Daedalus, 1986.
Etheridge, Elizabeth W. "Pellagra: An unappreciated reminder of Southern distinctiveness." In Disease and Distinctiveness in the American South. 1988. pp. 100-119.
Savitt, T.L., Goldberg, M.F. "Herrick's 1910 case report of sickle cell anemia." JAMA 1989 (261): 266-271.
Risse, Guenter B. "A long pull, a strong pull, and all together: San Francisco and bubonic plague, 1907-1908." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1992 (66): 260-286.
Hansen, Bert. “New images of a new medicine: Visual evidence for the widespread popularity of therapeutic discoveries in America after 1885.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1999 (73): 629-678.
Crenner, Christopher. “Diagnosis and authority in the early twentieth-century medical practice of Richard C. Cabot.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2002 (76): 30-55.
Marks, Harry M. “Epidemiologists explain pellagra: Gender, race, and political economy in the work of Edgar Sydenstricker.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2003 (58): 34-55.
Barde, Robert. “Prelude to the plague: Public health and politics at America's Pacific gateway, 1899.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2003 (58): 153-186.
Jurdjevic, Mark; and Tillman, Caitlin. “E. C. Noble in June 1921, and his account of the discovery of insulin.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2004 (78): 864-875.
Rasmussen, Nicolas. “The drug industry and clinical research in interwar America: Three types of physician collaborators.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2005 (79): 50-80.
Ruger, Jennifer P. “The changing role of the World Bank in global health.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 60-70.
Coelho, Philip R. P.; and McGuire, Robert A. “Racial differences in disease susceptibilities: Intestinal worm infections in the early twentieth-century American South.” Social History of Medicine 2006 (19): 461-482.
Cathon, Margo B. “Making ENDS meet: Community networks and health promotion among Blacks in the city of brotherly love.” American Journal of Public Health, 2011, 101(8): 1392-1401.

Quinn, Roswell. “Rethinking antibiotic research and development: World War II and the penicillin collaborative.” American Journal of Public Health, 2013, 103(3): 426-434.

Sledge, Daniel; and Mohler, George. “Eliminating malaria in the American south: An Analysis of the decline of malaria in 1930s Alabama.” American Journal of Public Health, 2013, 103(8): 1381-1392.


November 12 Tuesday 6:00 p.m. Lecture Room #5 Scaife Hall
Kerstin Bettermann, M.D., Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Neurology

Penn State School of Medicine
Being Struck through the Ages: From Hippocrates to Modern Stroke Care.”
November 13 Wednesday

The Development of the American Nursing Profession Pt. 1 by Judith A. Erlen, R.N., Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh.
“Trained nurses for the country.” JAMA, 1883, 1(17): 515-516.
“Specialism in nursing.” JAMA, 1890, 14(24): 871.
“Obstetrical nursing.” JAMA, 1891, 17(20): 781.
“Training schools for male nurses.” Reprinted from June 11, 1892. JAMA, 1992, 67(17): 2304.
“The hygiene of the sick room.” JAMA, 1893, 20(17): 487.
“The hospital hotel.” Reprinted from January 11, 1896 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 272(4): 324.
“The new nurse.” JAMA, 1896, 27(5): 274-275.
“The new nurse again.” JAMA, 1896, 27(11): 606-607.
“Trained nurse and adventuresses.” Reprinted from April 8, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 281(14): 1346
“Florence Nightingale.” Reprinted from September 3, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(9): 1018.
Lent, Mary E. “Public health nursing in the extra-cantonment zone.” American Journal of Public Health 1919 (9): 193-195.
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Bullough, Vern L., and Bullough, Bonnie. "The origins of modern American nursing: The Civil War era." Nursing Forum 1963 (2): 13-27.
Cannings, Kathleen, et al. "The development of the nursing labor force in the U.S.: A basic analysis." International Journal of Health Services 1975 (5): 185-216.
Reverby, Susan "The search for the hospital yardstick: Nursing and the rationalization of hospital work." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 206-218, 1985 edition.
Kalisch, Philip A.; and Kalisch, Beatrice J. The Advance of American Nursing. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1986. Pp. 1-53.
Fairman, Julie. “Alternative visions: The nurse-technology relationships in the context of the history of technology.” In Nursing History Review 1998 (6): 129-146.
Baer, Ellen D. "Nurses." in Women, Health, and Medicine in America, 1992. pp. 459-476.
Maggs, Christopher. "A general history of nursing: 1800-1900." in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. 1993. v. 2, pp. 1309-1328.
Buhler-Wilkerson, Karen. “Bringing care to the people: Lillian Wald’s legacy to public health nursing.”

American Journal of Public Health 1993, 83 (12): 1778-1786.
D'Antonio, Patricia O. "The legacy of domesticity: nursing in early nineteenth-century America." Nursing History Review 1993 (1): 229-246.
Helmstadter, Carol. "Robert Bentley Todd, Saint John's House, and the origins of the modern trained nurse." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1993 (67): 282-319.
Sarnecky, Mary T. “Nursing in the American army from the Revolution to the Spanish-American War.” Nursing History Review 1997 (5): 49-69.
Sandelowski, Margarete. “Making the best of things: Technology in American nursing, 1870-1940.” Nursing History Review 1997 (5): 3-22.
D’Antonio, Patricia. “Revisiting and Rethinking the Rewriting of Nursing History.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1999 (73): 268-290.
Hine, Darlene C. “’They shall mount up with wings as eagles’: Historical images of Black nurses, 1890-1950.” In Women and Health in America: Historical Readings. 2nd ed. Judith W. Leavitt, ed. 1999. Pp. 475-488.
Melosh, Barbara. "More than 'the physician's hand': Skill and authority in twentieth-century nursing." In Women and Health in America. 1999. Pp. 482-496.
Reverby, Susan. “’Neither for the drawing room nor for the kitchen’: Private duty nursing in Boston, 1873-1920.” In Women and Health in America: Historical Readings. 2nd ed. Judith W. Leavitt, ed. Pp. 460-474.
Sandelowski, Margarete. “The physician’s eyes: American nursing and the diagnostic revolution in medicine.” Nursing History Review 2000 (8): 3-38.
Helmstadter, Carol. “Early Nursing Reform in Nineteenth-Century London: A Doctor-Driven Phenomenon.” Medical History 2002 (46): 325-350.
Huntsman, R. G.; Bruin, Mary; and Holttum, Deborah. “Twixt Candle and Lamp: The Contribution of Elizabeth Fry and the Institution of Nursing Sisters to Nursing Reform.” Medical History 2002 (46): 351-380.
Reverby, Susan. “’Neither for the drawing room nor for the kitchen’: Private duty nursing in Boston, 1873-1920.” In Women and Health in America: Historical Readings. 2nd ed. Judith W. Leavitt, ed. Pp. 460-474.
Fairman, Julie; and D’Antonio, Patricia. “Reimaging nursing’s place in the history of clinical practice.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 2008 (63): 435-446.
Fee, Elizabeth; and Bu, Liping. “The origins of public health nursing: The Henry Street Visiting Nurse Service.” American Journal of Public Health 2010 (100): 1206-1207.
Roth, Ginny A.; and Fee, Elizabeth. “A soldier’s hero: Edith Cavell (1865–1915).” American Journal of Public Health, 2010, 100(10): 1865-1866.
Telford, Jennifer C.; and Long, Thomas L. “Gendered spaces, gendered pages: Union women in

Civil War nurse narratives.” Medical Humanities, 2012. 38(2): 97-105.

Thompson, Mary E. “Nurses' role in the prevention of infant mortality in 1884–1925: Health disparities then and now.” Journal of Pediatric Nursing, 2012, 27: 471-478.
Baer, Ellen D. “Key ideas in nursing’s first century.” American Journal of Nursing, 2012, 112(5): 48-55.
November 15 Friday

The Development of the American Nursing Profession, Pt. 2 by Judith A. Erlen, R.N., Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh.
Cannings, Kathleen, et al. "The development of the nursing labor force in the U.S.: A basic analysis." International Journal of Health Services 1975 (5): 185-216.
Wagner, David. "The proletarianization of nursing in the United States, 1932-1946." International Journal of Health Services 1980 (10): 271-290.
Reverby, Susan "The search for the hospital yardstick: Nursing and the rationalization of hospital work." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 206-218, 1985 edition.
Leighow, Susan R. “Backrubs vs. Bach: Nursing and the entry-into-practice debate, 1946-1986.” Nursing History Review 1996 (4): 3-17.
Sandelowski, Margarete. “Making the best of things: Technology in American nursing, 1870-1940.” Nursing History Review 1997 (5): 3-22.

Fairman, Julie. “Alternative visions: The nurse-technology relationships in the context of the history of technology.” In Nursing History Review 1998 (6): 129-146.


Hine, Darlene C. “’They shall mount up with wings as eagles’: Historical images of Black nurses, 1890-1950.” In Women and Health in America: Historical Readings. 2nd ed. Judith W. Leavitt, ed. 1999. Pp. 475-488.
Melosh, Barbara. "More than 'the physician's hand': Skill and authority in twentieth-century nursing." In Women and Health in America. 1999. Pp. 482-496.
Grando, Victoria T. “A hard day’s work: Institutional nursing in the Post-World War II era.” Nursing History Review 2000 (8): 169-184.
Fuqua, Joy V. “The nurse-saver and the TV hostess: Advertising hospital television, 1950-1970.” In Cultural Sutures: Medicine and Media, pp. 74-92.
Grando, Victoria T. “A hard day’s work: Institutional nursing in the Post-World War II era.” Nursing History Review 2000 (8): 169-184.
Polsky, Daniel; et. al. “Trends in Characteristics and Country of Origin Among Foreign-Trained Nurses in the United States, 1990 and 2000.” American Journal of Public Health 2007 (97): 895-899.
Buckingham, Stephanie. “Nursing history for the Net Generation.” Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 2010 27(1): 185-198.
D’Antonio, Patricia. “Cultivating constituencies: The story of the East Harlem Nursing and Health Service, 1928–1941.” American Journal of Public Health, 2013, 103(6): 988-996.
November 18 Monday

History of Tuberculosis in the 20th Century-PBS videotape-Pt. 1



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