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



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Tuberculosis: World Health Organization endorses a device for quicker diagnosis.” New York Times, 2010.Talbot, Elizabeth A., et. al. “Tuberculosis Among Foreign-Born Persons in the United States, 1993-1998.” JAMA, 2000, 284(22): 2894.


Barr, R. Graham, et. al. “Neighborhood poverty and the resurgence of tuberculosis in New York City, 1984–1992.” American Journal of Public Health 2001 (91): 1487-1493.
Coker, Richard. “Civil liberties and public good: detention of tuberculous patients and the Public Health Act 1984.” Medical History 2001 (45): 341-358.
Desvarieux, Moise, Hyppolite, Pierre-Richard, Johnson, Jr., Warren D.; and Pape, Jean W. “A novel approach to directly observed therapy for tuberculosis in an HIV-endemic area.” American Journal of Public Health 2001 (91): 138-141.
Jones, David S. “The health care experiments at many farms: The Navajo, tuberculosis, and the limits of modern medicine, 1952-1962.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2002 (76): 749-790.
Davidow, Amy L.; et. al. “Rethinking the socioeconomics and geography of tuberculosis among foreign-born residents of New Jersey, 1994–1999.” American Journal of Public Health 2003 (93): 1007-1012.
Amrith, Sunil. “In search of a ‘magic bullet’ for tuberculosis: South India and beyond, 1955-1965.” Social History of Medicine, 2004, 17(1): 113-130.
Schneider, Eileen. “Tuberculosis among American Indians and Alaska natives in the United States, 1993–2002.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 873-880.
Welshman, John. “Compulsion, localism, and pragmatism: The micro-politics of tuberculosis screening in the United Kingdom, 1950–1965.” Social History of Medicine, 2006, 19(2): 295-312.
Bukhman, Gene; and Kidder, Alice. “Global health equity: Lessons from tuberculosis control then and now.” American Journal of Public Health 2008 (98): 44-54.
Oren, Eyal. “Epidemiology of urban tuberculosis in the United States, 2000–2007.” American Journal of Public Health 2011 (101): 1256-1263.
Kelly, Susan. “Educational of tubercular children in Northern Ireland, 1921-1955.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(2): 407-425.

Anand, Geeta; and McKay, Betsy. “How fight to tame TB made it stronger.” The Wall Street Journal,


November 23, 2012.

Anand, Geeta. “A woman's drug-resistant TB echoes around the world.” The Wall Street Journal,


September 8, 2012.

McIvor, Arthur. “Germs at work: Establishing tuberculosis as an occupational disease in Britain, c. 1900-1951.” Social History of Medicine, 2012, 25(4): 812-829.


Centers for Disease Control. “Trends in tuberculosis—United States 2012.” Weekly, 62(11), March 22, 2013.
November 22 Friday

What is and Epidemic? PBS videotape-Influenza 1918
“The influenza epidemic of 1889.” Reprinted from January 4, 1890. issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 261(1): 42.
“The Russian influenza” Reprinted from January 4, 1890. issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 261(1): 42.
“The microbe.” JAMA, 1890, 14(2): 59-60.
“The epidemic.” JAMA, 1890, 14(2): 60-61.
“The bacteriology of influenza.” Reprinted from February 22, 1890. issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 263(8): 1134.
Davis, Nathan S. “Report on the meteorological conditions and their relations to the epidemic influenza, and some other diseases in Chicago during the six months ending March 31, 1890.” JAMA, 1890, 14(23): 817-822.
Ulrich, C. E. “Some of the vagaries of the grippe.” JAMA, 1890, 15(14): 495-497.
“An analysis of the statistics of forty-one thousand five hundred cases of epidemic influenza.” Reprinted from March 14, 1891. issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1991, 265(10): 1220.

Epidemic typhoid fever at Waterbury, Connecticut.” JAMA, 1891, 17(10): 375-376.


Ingals, E. Fletcher. “The epidemics of influenza of 1890 and 1891 in Chicago.” JAMA, 1891, 17(15): 557-560.
“La Grippe.” JAMA, 17(26): 993.
Hughes, C. H. “The epidemic inflammatory neurosis; or, neurotic influenza.” JAMA, 1892, 18(9): 245-249.
“Influenza.” JAMA, 1892, 18(13): 397-398.
“Epidemic influenza: Commonly called ‘The Grip.” Reprinted from May 19, 1894. issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 271(17): 1299.
“Dr. Yersin, the discoverer of the anti-plague serum.” JAMA, 1897. 28(8): 372-373.

“Dissemination of bacteria from the mouth during speaking, coughing, and otherwise.” Reprinted from June 23, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 284(2): 156.


Crawford, G. E. “Influenza.” Reprinted from January 27, 1900 issue of JAMA. . JAMA, 2000, 283(4): 449.
“A saner view of cholera.” Reprinted from October 22, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(15): 1729.
Abrahams, Adolphe; et. al. “Purulent bronchitis: Its influenzal and pneumococcal bacteriology.” Lancet, 1917, 190, (4906): 377-382.
Darling, Chester A. “The epidemiology and bacteriology of influenza.” American Journal of Public Health 1918 (October): 751-754.

“Weapons against-influenza.” American Journal of Public Health 1918 (October): 787-788.

“The influenza papers in this issue.” American Journal of Public Health 1918 (October): 789.

“Progress of the influenza epidemic in the larger cities of the United States.” American Journal of Public Health 1918 (November): 857-859.


Prepared by an editorial committee of the American Public Health Association and based on papers, committee reports and discussions presented at the meeting of the Association held in Chicago, Illinois, December 9 to 12, 1918. “A working program against influenza.” American Journal of Public Health 1919 (January): 1-13.

Nicoll, Matthias, Jr., Deputy Commissioner of Health of New York State. “What we really know about the epidemic.” American Journal of Public Health 1919 (January): 43-44.


Davis, William H. “The influenza epidemic as shown in the Weekly Health Index.” American Journal of Public Health 1919 (January): 50-61.
Harris, Louis I. “The ultimate benefit to be derived from the epidemic.” Excerpted from: Louis I. Harris, “The Ultimate Benefit to Be Derived From the Epidemic,” American Journal of Public Health, 1919, 9: 41–43. American Journal of Public Health, 2011, 101(8): 1402-1403.

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Rosenberg, Charles E. “Disease and social order in America: Perspectives and expectations.” AIDS: The Burden of History. pp. 12-32.
Katz, R. S. “Influenza 1918-1919: a study in mortality.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 1974 (48): 416-422.
Weinstein, L. “Editorial: Influenza-1918, a revisit?” New England Journal of Medicine, 1976 (294): 1058-1060.
Kaplan, Martin M.; and Robert G. Webster. “The epidemiology of influenza.” Scientific American, 1977 (237): 88-106.
Katz, R. S. “Influenza 1918-1919: a further study in mortality.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 1977 (51): 617-619.
Walters, J. H. “Influenza 1918: the contemporary perspective.” Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, 1978 (54): 855-864.
Stevens, Kingsley M. “The pathophysiology of influenza pneumonia in 1918.” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1981 (25): 115-125.
White, Kenneth A. “Pittsburgh in the great epidemic of 1918.” Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, 1985 (68): 221-242.
Rosenberg, Charles E. “Disease in history: Frames and framers.” The Milbank Quarterly, 1989 (67, Supplement 1): 1-15.
Langford, Christopher. “The age pattern of mortality in the 1918-19 influenza pandemic: an attempted explanation based on data for England and Wales.” Medical History, 2002 (46): 1-20.
Eyler, John M. “The fog of research: Influenza vaccine trials during the 1918–19 pandemic.” Journal of the History of Medicine, 2009 (64): 401-428.

Hutter, Gero, et.al. “Long-term control of HIV by CCR5 Delta 32/Delta 32 stem-cell transplantation.” New England Journal of Medicine, 2009, 360(6); 692-698.

Dehner, George. “WHO knows best? National and international responses to pandemic threats

and the "Lessons" of 1976.” Journal of the History of Medicine, 2010 (65): 478-513.


Alcorn, Keith. “Stem cell transplant has cured HIV infection in 'Berlin patient', say doctors.” Stern, December 13, 2010.

Higgins, James. “’With every accompaniment of ravage and agony’: Pittsburgh and the influenza epidemic of 1918-1919.” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 2010 84(3): 263-286.



Estimates of deaths associated with seasonal influenza—United States, 1976-2007.” JAMA, 2010, 304(16): 1778-1780.

Higgins, James. “’With every accompanying rage and agony’: Pittsburgh and the influenza epidemic of 1918-1919.” The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 2010, 134(3): 263-286.


Sivaramakrishnan, Kavita. “The return of epidemics and the politics of global–local health.” American Journal of Public Health, 2011, (101): 1032-1041.
“The need for interdisciplinary studies of historic pandemics,” Vaccine, 2011, 29(Supplement 2): B1-B5.


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