Sunday Morning Medicine
Sunday Morning Medicine
A weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news
- It’s time for a Latino museum.
- Mad dogs and bindweed cures.
- The deadly bilibid prison vaccine trials.
- How scientists use and abuse portraiture.
- How will we tell the story of coronavirus?
- Vaccine mistrust historic and rooted in injustice.
- “We have not yet forgiven Haiti for being Black.”
- The new abortion rights advocates are on TikTok.
- Hear from nurse who inspired new Marvel comic book.
- San Francisco’s history of exploding dynamite factories.
- Enslaved children and the whitewashing of vaccine history.
- Accessibility in gaming and the problem of epileptic triggers.
- Abigail Adams had her children inoculated against smallpox.
- How art movements tried to make sense of the 1918 flu pandemic.
- The horse flu epidemic that brought 19th-century America to a stop.
Jacqueline Antonovich is the creator and co-founder of Nursing Clio and served as executive editor from 2012 to 2021. She is an Assistant Professor of History at Muhlenberg College. Her current research focuses on women physicians, race, gender, and medical imperialism in the American West. Jacqueline received her PhD from the University of Michigan in 2018.
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