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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Whoriskey, Peter. “Can medical research be trusted? Rising painkiller addiction shows damage from drugmakers’ role in shaping medical opinion.” The Washington Post, December 20, 2012.

Boodman, Sandra G. “Anger management courses are a new tool for dealing with out-of-control doctors.” The Washington Post, March 4, 2013.


Altman, Lawrence K. “Making the right call, even in death.” The New York Times, July 1, 2013.
Ekberg, Merryn. “The old eugenics and the new genetics compared.” Social History of Medicine, 2013, 20(3): 581-593.
Mold, Alex. “Repositioning the patient: Patient organizations, consumerism, and autonomy in Britain during the 1960s and 1970s.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2013, 87(2): 225-249.
December 6 Friday

Ethical Issues in 20th Century American Medicine and Health Care
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Hippocrates.” p. 261
Medicine and Western Civilization. “The Bible.” p. 263
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Asa Juddaeus.” p. 267.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Human Experimentation Congressional Hearings.” p. 330.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Pius XII.” p. 417.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Definition of Irreversible Coma-Harvard Medical School.” p. 421.

“Code of medical ethics. Of the duties of physicians to their patients, and of the obligations of patients to their physicians.” JAMA, 1886, 7(26): 711-717.

“Element of consent in surgical operations.” JAMA, 1890, 15(11): 401-402.

“Element of consent in surgical operations.” JAMA, 1890, 15(11): 401-402.


“The treatment of syphilis.” JAMA, 1890, 15(12): 435-436.

“Honesty in experimental research.” Reprinted from November 12, 1892 JAMA. JAMA, 268(18): 2584.


“The Code of Ethics….” Reprinted from May 27, 1893 JAMA. JAMA, 269(19): 2501.
“The public press and the physicians.” Reprinted from July 22, 1893 JAMA. JAMA, 270(4): 412.
“The testimony of physicians in courts of justice in the District of Columbia.” JAMA, 1896, 26(12): 585-586.
Stewart, F. E.. “So is it ethical for medical men to patent medicine inventions?” Reprinted from September 18, 1897 JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 278(10): 816b.
“Sacredness of professional confidentiality.” JAMA, 1897, 28(6): 275.****
Foshay, Maxwell. “Medical ethics and medical journals.” Reprinted from April 28, 1900 JAMA. JAMA, 283(16): 2080.
“The right of property in medical records.” Reprinted from August 4, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 284(6): 260-a.

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Beecher, Henry K. "Ethics and clinical research." New England Journal of Medicine 1966 (274): 1354-1360.


Liegner, Leonard M. “St Christopher’s Hospice, 1974: Care of the Dying Patient.” Reprinted from December 8, 1975 issue of JAMA.. JAMA, 284 (19): 2426.
Brandt, Allan M. "Polio, politics, publicity, and duplicity: ethical aspects in the development of the Salk Vaccine." Connecticut Medicine 1979 (43): 581-590.

Howard-Jones, Norman. "Human experimentation in historical and ethical perspectives." Social Science and Medicine 1982 16: 1429-1448.


Rothman, David J. "Were Tuskegee and Willowbrook 'studies in nature'?" Hasting Center Report 1982 (12:2): 5-7.
Lederer, Susan E. “Hideyo Noguchi’s luetin experiment and the antivivisectionists.” ISIS 1985 (76): 31-48.
Faden, Ruth R.; and Beauchamp, Tom L. A History and Theory of Informed Consent. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986, pp. 53-100.
Rothman, David J. “Ethics and human experimentation: Henry Beecher revisited.” New England Journal of Medicine, 317: 1195-1199, 1987.
Rothman, David J. "Ethics and human experimentation." New England Journal of Medicine 1987 (317): 1195-1199.

Lederer, Susan E. “Political animals: The shaping of biomedical research literature in twentieth century America.” ISIS 1992 (83): 61-79.


Baker, Robert. "The history of medical ethics." in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. 1993.

v. 2, pp. 854-887.


Barondess, Jeremiah A. “Medicine against society: Lessons from the Third Reich.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1657-1661.
Smith, Dale C. “The Hippocratic Oath and modern medicine.” Journal of the History of Medicine 1996 (51): 484-500.

Skolnick, Andrew A. “Discovery of 50-year-old Naval logbook may aid follow-up study of radium-exposed veterans.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1628-1630.




Katz, Jay. “The Nuremberg Code and the Nuremberg Trial: A reappraisal.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1662-1666.




Faden, Ruth F.; et.al. “US medical researchers, the Nuremberg Doctors Trial, and the Nuremberg Code: A review of findings of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments “ JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1667-1671.

Israel, Howard A. “Nazi origins of an anatomy text: The Pernkopf Atlas.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1633.

Sonis, Jeffrey. “Teaching of human rights in US medical schools.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1676-1678.


Panush, Richard A. Nazi origins of an anatomy text: The Pernkopf Atlas.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1633-1634.
Hutton, Edward B., Jr. Nazi origins of an anatomy text: The Pernkopf Atlas-Reply.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1634.

Seidelman, William E. “The path to Nuremberg in the pages of JAMA, 1933-1939.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1693-1696.




“The Nuremberg Code.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1691.




Grodin, Michael A.; and Annas, George J. “Legacies of Nuremberg: Medical ethics and human rights.” JAMA, 1996, 276(20): 1682-1683.

Pernick, Martin S. “Eugenics and public health in American history.” American Journal of Public Health, 1997 (87): 1767-1772.



World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: Recommendations guiding physicians in biomedical research Involving human subjects.” JAMA, 1997, 1997, 277(11): 925-926.




Flanagin, Annette. “Who wrote the Declaration of Helsinki?JAMA, 1997, 1997, 277(11): 926.

Wilson, Daniel J. “A Crippling Fear: Experiencing Polio in the Era of FDR.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1998 (72): 464-495.


Shuster, Evelyne. “The Nuremberg code: Hippocratic ethics and human rights.” The Lancet 1998 (351): 974-977.
Marrus, Michael R. “The Nuremberg Doctors' Trial in Historical Context.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1999 (73): 106-123.
Benedek, Thomas G.; and Erlen, Jonathon. “The scientific environment of the Tuskegee study of syphilis, 1920-1960.” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1999 (43:1): 1-30.
Sofair, Andre N.; and Lauris C. Kaldjian. “Eugenics sterilization and a qualified Nazi analogy: The United States and Germany, 1930-1945.” Annals of Internal Medicine 2000 (132): 312-322.

Meisel, Alan, et.al. “Seven Legal Barriers to End-of-Life Care: Myths, Realities, and Grains of Truth.” JAMA, 2000, 284(19): 2495-2501.




World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects.” JAMA, 2000, 284(23): 3043-3045.




Vastag, Brian. “Helsinki Discord? A Controversial Declaration.” JAMA, 2000, 284(23): 2983-2985.

Freimuth, Vicki S.; et. al. “African Americans’ view on research and the Tuskegee syphilis study.” Social Science & Medicine 2001 (52): 797-808.


Weindling, Paul. “The Origins of Informed Consent: The International Scientific Commission on Medical War Crimes, and the Nuremberg Code.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 20001 (75): 37-71.
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.
Prescott, Heather M. “Using the student body: College and university students as research subjects in the United States during the twentieth century.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2002 (57): 3-38.
Glantz, Leonard H. “Nontherapeutic research with children: Grimes v Kennedy Krieger Institute.” American Journal of Public Health 2002 (92): 1070-11073.
Bonah, Christian. “’Experimental rage’: The development of medical ethics and the genesis of scientific facts Ludwik Fleck: An answer of the crisis of modern medicine in interwar Germany?” Social History of Medicine 2002 (15): 187-207.
Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Public Health (1990). The Human Body on Trial: A Handbook with Cases, Laws, and Documents. Santa Barbara: ABC CLIO, 2002. pp. 74-79.

Hazelgrove. Jenny. “The old faith and the new science: The Nuremberg Code and human experimentation ethics in Britain, 1946-73.” The Society for the Social History of Medicine 2002 (15): 109-135.


Harkness, Jon M. “Nuremberg and the issue of wartime experiments on US prisoners: The Green Committee.” JAMA, 276(20): 1672-1675,
Rothman, David J. “Serving Clio and Client: The Historian as Expert Witness.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2003 (77): 25-44.
Dracobly, Alex. “Ethics and Experimentation on Human Subjects in Mid-Nineteenth-Century France:
The Story of the 1859 Syphilis Experiments.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2003 (7): 332-366.
Belkin, Gary S. “Brain death and the historical understanding of bioethics.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2003 (58): 325-361.
Appel, Jacob M. “A Duty to Kill? A Duty to Die? Rethinking the Euthanasia Controversy of 1906.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2004 (78): 610-634.
Stern, Alexandra M. “Race, Immigration, and Reproductive Control in Modern California.” American Journal of Public Health 2005 (95): 1128-1138.
Savitt, Todd. “Medical experimentation and demonstration on Blacks in the Old South.” In Race and Medicine in Nineteenth-and Early-Twentieth-Century America. Pp. 77-88.
Weindling, Paul. “’No mere murder trial’: The discourse on human experimentation at the Nuremburg Medical Trial.” In Twentieth Century Ethics of Human Subjects Research: Historical Perspectives on Values, Practices, and Regulations. Pp. 167-180.
Lederer, Susan. “Research without border: The origins of the Declaration of Helsinki.” In Twentieth Century Ethics of Human Subjects Research: Historical Perspectives on Values, Practices, and Regulations. Pp. 199-218.
Rothman, David. “Back to first principles: First world research in third world countries.” In Man, Medicine and the State. Pp.279-288.
Lederer, Susan. “Darkened by the shadow of the atom: Burn research in 1950’s America.” In Man, Medicine and the State. Pp. 263-278.
Normandin, Sebastian. “Claude Bernard and An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine: "Physical Vitalism," Dialectic, and Epistemology.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2007 (62): 495-528.
Ekberg, Merryn. “The Old Eugenics and the New Genetics Compared.” Social History of Medicine 2007 (20): 581-593.
Rosner, David; and Markowitz, Gerald. “The Trials and Tribulations of Two Historians: Adjudicating Responsibility for Pollution and Personal Harm.” Medical History 2009 (53): 271-292.
Hedgecoe, Adam. ““A Form of Practical Machinery”: The Origins of Research Ethics Committees in the UK, 1967–1972.” Medical History 2009 (53): 331-350.
Frieden, Thomas R.; and Collins, Francis S. “Intentional Infection of Vulnerable Populations in 1946-1948 Another Tragic History Lesson.” JAMA October 11, 2010.
Festle, Mary Jo. “Enemies or Allies?: The Organ Transplant Medical Community, the Federal Government, and the Public in the United States, 1967–2000.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2010 (65): 48-80.
Koski, Greg. “’Rethinking research ethics,’ again: Casuistry, phronesis, and the continuing challenges of human research.” The American Journal of Bioethics, 2010, 10: 37-39.
Carroll, Tamar W.; and Gutmann, Myron P. “The limits of autonomy: The Belmont Report and the history of childhood.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 2011 (66): 82-115.
Reverby, Susan M. ”’Normal exposure” and inoculation syphilis: A PHS “Tuskegee” doctor in Guatemala, 1946-1948.” The Journal of Public History 2011, 23 (1): 6-28.
Will, Jonathan F. “A brief historical and theoretical perspective on patient autonomy and medical decision making.” Chest, 2011, 39(3): 669-673.

Moses, Hamilton, III; and Martin, Joseph B. “Biomedical research and health advances.” New England Journal of Medicine February 9, 2011.


Reverby, Susan M.; and Lederer, Susan. Tape on Tuskegee and Guatemalan syphilis research studies.

Marwick, Charles. “New Head of Federal Office Clear on Protecting Human Research Participants.” JAMA, 284(12): 1501-102.




Helms, Ann D.; and Tomlinson, Tommy. “Wallace Kuralt’s era of sterilization: Mecklenburg's impoverished had few, if any, rights in the '50s and '60s as he oversaw one of the most aggressive efforts to sterilize certain populations.” Charlotte Observer, September 27, 2011.


http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/09/26/2637820/wallace-kuralts-era-of-sterilization.html
Cohen, Patricia.”Questioning privacy: Protections in research.” New York Times, October 24, 2011.

tp://tinyurl.com/69elxja
Sparks, Joel. “Timeline of laws related to the protection of human subjects.”
Mock, Geoffrey. “Duke taking new steps to safeguard research integrity.” Duke Today, 2012, February 24.
Junod, Suzanne White. “FDA and clinical drug trials: A short history.” United States Food and Drug Administration, May 18, 2012.
Hafner, Katie. “An ill doctor, a surprise reflection of who picks assisted suicide.” The New York Times, August 11, 2012.
Stillwell, Devon. “Eugenics Visualized: The Exhibit of the Third International Congress of Eugenics, 1932.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2012, 86(2): 206-236.
Boodman, Sandra G. “As doctors grow older , hospitals begin requiring them to prove they’re still fit.” The Washington Post, December 10, 2012.
Lundstrom, Marjie; and Stanton, Sam. “Evaluation of UC Davis Medical Center’s handling of neurosurgeons is scathing.” The Sacramento Bee, December 23, 2012.
DuBois, James M. “Restoring balance: A consensus statement on the protection of vulnerable research participants.” American Journal of Public Health, 2012, 102(12): 2220-2225.
Conaway, Chelsea. “Thank you, but I can’t accept it: Navigating patient gift giving.” The Boston Globe, December 21, 2012.

Whoriskey, Peter. “Can medical research be trusted?: Rising painkiller addiction shows damage from drugmakers’ role in shaping medical opinion.” The Washington Post, December 20, 2012.

Rosner, David; and Markowitz, Gerald. “With the best intentions: Lead research and the challenge to public health.” American Journal of Public Health, 2012, 102: e19-e33.


Crenner, Christopher. “The Tuskegee Syphilis Study and the scientific concept of racial nervous resistance.” Journal of the History of Medicine, 2012, 67(2): 244-280.
Creamer, Anita. “Clinical trials on rise, but many lack participants.” The Sacramento Bee, February 2, 2013.
Karoub, Jeff. “What does a hospital do if a patient vetoes a black nurse?” The Sacramento Bee, February 23, 2013.
Gutman, Amy. “Safeguarding children—pediatric research on medical countermeasures.” New England Journal of Medicine, March 19, 2013.
Adashi, Eliy. “When the first person with quadriplegia walks again.” JAMA, April 10, 2013.

Farnan, Jeanne M.; et. al. “Online medical professionalism: Patient and public relationships: Policy statement from the American College of Physicians and the Federation of State Medical Boards.” Annals of Internal Medicine, April 11, 2013, 158(8): 620-627.


Kolata, Gina. “a conversation with Eric D. Green: Human genome, then and now.” The New York Times, April 15, 2013.


Tavernis, Sabrina. “Crucial studies, fragile subjects.” The New York Times, April 15, 2013.
Rabin, Roni Caryn. “Doctors’ lucrative industry ties.” New York Times, May 13, 2013.
Baker, Robert B.; et. al. “African American physicians and organized medicine, 1846-1968: Origins of a racial divide.” JAMA, 2008, 300(3): 306-313.

Kendall, Duncan; and Narula, Amrita. “How a secretive panel uses data that distort doctors’ pay.” The Washington Post, July, 2013.

ILöwy, LLana. “The best possible intentions: Testing prophylactic approaches on humans in developing countries.” American Journal of Public Health, 2013, 103(2): 226-237.


Berman, Francine. “Who will pay for public access to research data?” Science, 2013, 341(6146): 616-617.
Lundstrom, Marjie. “UC Davis surgeons resign after bacteria-in-brain dispute.” The Sacramento Bee, August 25, 2013.
December 14-Saturday
Time: noon-1:00 pm

FINAL EXAMINATION-same room




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