For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Postdoctoral Fellows Christy Slobogin and Antoine Johnson. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today. - ...
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12: Nicole Labruto - on undergraduate education & on plants, science, and colonialism
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Join us in our conversation with Nicole Labruto, anthropologist and director of the Medicine, Science, and the Humanities undergraduate major here at Johns Hopkins. In this episode, we discuss both Dr. Labruto’s own anthropological research – on sugar cane, science, the environment, and society – as well as the importance of offering an interdiscip…
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Matthew Klingle (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on diabetes, stress, and discrimination
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15:52
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15:52
In this mini episode, we speak with Matthew Klingle about the paper that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series, titled "'Wear and Tear': An Ecology of Diabetes, Stress, and Discrimination."Von For the Medical Record
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11: Alexander Parry and Wendy Shields - on rethinking injuries
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Join us in our conversation with Wendy Shields, Senior Scientist at the Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Alexander Parry, PhD candidate in History of Medicine. These two are part of a wider research network and team spearheading the field of injury studies, in part represented by a hybrid, internationally focused conference in March 2024 call…
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Aishah Scott (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on respectability politics and HIV/AIDS
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16:36
In this mini episode, we talk to Aishah Scott about the research that she presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series, titled "Trickledown Respectability Politics and HIV/AIDS in Black America."Von For the Medical Record
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10: Lauren Small - on narrative medicine
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Join us in our conversation with Lauren Small, writer, novelist, and academic here at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. In this episode, we discuss the roles, purposes, and benefits of narrative medicine, particularly in relation to the AfterWards program that Lauren runs. Our discussion of Lauren’s own historical fiction works takes us from an influenza…
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Pablo Gómez (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on quantifying bodies
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In this mini episode, we talk to Pablo F. Gómez about the research that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series, titled "Slave Trading and the Imagination of the Quantifiable Body in the Early Modern Atlantic."Von For the Medical Record
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9: Kamna Balhara and Nathan Irvin - on the health humanities in emergency medicine
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Join us in our conversation with Nathan Irvin and Kamna Balhara, both physicians and professors in the Emergency Medicine Department here at Johns Hopkins. In this episode, we hear about the phenomenal work that these two are doing spearheading Health Humanities at Hopkins Emergency Medicine (H3EM). In particular, we discuss why humanities are vita…
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Joseph Vignone (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on medieval Islamic memory
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In this mini episode, we talk to Joseph Leonardo Vignone about the research that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series, titled "Remembering Bodies: A Medieval Islamic History of Human Enhancement."Von For the Medical Record
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Graham Mooney (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on alcohol and public health in Baltimore
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15:36
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15:36
In this mini episode, we speak to Graham Mooney about the paper that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series titled “How Public Health Makes 'Behavior': Alcohol Programs in Post World War II Baltimore.”Von For the Medical Record
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Zubin Mistry (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on monastic gynecology
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In this mini episode, we speak to Zubin Mistry about the paper that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series titled “The Problem of Monastic Gynecology: Reproduction, Religion and Medicine in Western Europe before 1100.”Von For the Medical Record
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Rana Hogarth (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on skin color, eugenics, and slavery
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16:19
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In this mini episode, we speak to Rana Hogarth about the paper that she presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series titled “The Science of Skin Color: Miscegenation and the Eugenic Gaze in the Early Twentieth Century.”Von For the Medical Record
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8: Jolien Gijbels - on the patient's voice and the surgical archive
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Join us in our conversation with Jolien Gijbels, a Fulbright and Belgian American Educational Foundation (BAEF) visiting scholar in the Department of the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University. In this episode, primarily we discuss finding the patient’s voice in the archive, and how listening to the patient and other marginalized groups is…
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Eram Alam (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on logistics and medical tourism
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15:39
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15:39
In this mini episode, we talk to Eram Alam about the research that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine, & Technology's colloquium series, titled "The Logistical Body: Reflections on Medicine and Movement."Von For the Medical Record
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7: Jessica Leigh Hester - on sewers
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42:53
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42:53
Join us in our conversation with science journalist and Johns Hopkins History of Medicine PhD student Jessica Leigh Hester about her recent book Sewer (Bloomsbury, 2022). We discuss the medical, social, and structural intricacies of sewers – and sewer stewardship – as well as Jessica’s PhD research on graverobbing and the display of human remains. …
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Courtney Thompson (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on emotion and the history of medicine
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13:58
In this mini episode, we talk to Courtney Thompson about the research that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine, & Technology's colloquium series, titled "A Calculus of Compassion: Emotion, Medicine, and Identity in Late-Nineteenth-Century America."Von For the Medical Record
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6: Walker Magrath - on the nation's first gender-affirming surgery clinic
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Join us in our conversation with medical student Walker Magrath about his recent work as a scholarly concentrator in the history of medicine. In 2022, Walker published an article in Annals of Internal Medicine titled “The Fall of the Nation’s First Gender-Affirming Surgery Clinic.” In this episode, we discuss the history of this gender-affirming su…
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Alexandre White (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on Epidemic Orientalism
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In this mini episode, we talk to Alexandre White about his new book Epidemic Orientalism: Race, Capital, and the Governance of Infectious Disease (Stanford University Press, 2023). Dr. White's book launch was part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology's colloquium series.…
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5: The Opioid Industry Documents Archive - on archiving the epidemic
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Join us in our conversation with Caleb Alexander, MD, MS, and Jason Chernesky, PhD, about the Opioid Industry Documents Archive. Both based at Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Alexander is a practicing internist and epidemiologist, and Dr. Chernesky is a historian of medicine and the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) Opioid Industry …
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Dominique Tobbell (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on community health centers
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17:47
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In our fourth mini episode, we talk to Dominique Tobbell about the lecture that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series, titled “'Mom and Tots': Nursing and the Politics of Community Health in 1960s' Detroit.”Von For the Medical Record
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4: Black Beyond Data - on digital and Black medical humanities
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Join us in our conversation with Jessica Marie Johnson, Lauren Rubin, and Alexandre (Sasha) White about their leadership of the Mellon-funded Black Beyond Data project. Johnson is a historian and digital humanist at Hopkins, Rubin is the Director of Development at the St. Francis Neighborhood Center in Baltimore, and White is in the departments of …
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Beatrix Hoffman (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on healthcare on the border
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In our third mini episode, we talk to Beatrix Hoffman about the lecture that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series, titled “Borders of Care: A History of Immigration, Migration and the Right to Health Care.”Von For the Medical Record
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3: Jeremy Greene - on the limits of telehealth
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53:32
Join us in our conversation with Jeremy Greene, MD PhD. Jeremy is the William H. Welch Professor of Medicine and the History of Medicine, as well as the director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Medical Humanities & Social Medicine (which sponsors this podcast) and the Johns Hopkins Department of the History of Medicine. In this episode, we talk wit…
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Mary Fissell (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on the history of abortion
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12:48
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In our second mini episode, we talk to Mary Fissell about the lecture that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series, titled “Long Before Roe: A Victorian Abortion Case.” This special colloquium presentation was given on the occasion of Mary Fissell’s endowment as the J. …
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2: Lan Li - on methods of medical knowledge
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48:41
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Join us in our conversation with Lan Li, PhD – a scholar of global East Asian medicine, acupuncture, sensation, and histories of science – in which we discuss how to take your work seriously without taking yourself too seriously, as well as thinking about situated, embodied practices. Using Lan’s varied career as a historian, media producer, and re…
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Oluwatoyin Oduntan and Jonathan Roberts (Colloquium Mini Episode) - on decolonizing African medicine
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14:43
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14:43
This is our first installment in a series of mini episodes of “For the Medical Record” that will focus on the scholars invited to present at the Colloquia of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology. In this episode, we talked to Oluwatoyin Oduntan and Jonathan Roberts about their paper “Decolonizing Africa and the…
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1: Carolyn Sufrin - on reproductive wellness of incarcerated individuals
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Join us in our conversation with Carolyn Sufrin, MD, PhD, in which we discuss how “reproduction is everything,” particularly in her research and advocacy around the reproductive wellness of incarcerated individuals. Working on the now and thinking through what a future system may look like, we explore with Carolyn: “what does it mean to care in a s…
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Welcome to For the Medical Record! Full episodes coming soon! For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Postdoctoral Fellows Christy Slobogin and Antoine Johnson. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the…
…
continue reading