Loading…
2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Type: Concurrent Session clear filter
Friday, June 5
 

9:30am EDT

A1. Grassroots Matters: Beyond the State in East Asian Healthcare
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Wayne Soon, Grassroots Politics Matter: Towards a New History of Universal Health Care in Taiwan ([email protected])
2. Po-Hsun Chen, Needling about the ‘One China’: The Policies to Acupuncture Anaesthesia and Trans-Pacific Scientific Acupuncture Research in Cold War Taiwan ([email protected])
3. Eunjeong Ma, Roboticizing healthcare in South Korea: A case of rehabilitation robots ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
FF

Fa-Ti Fan

Binghamton University, SUNY
Speakers
avatar for Po-Hsun Chen

Po-Hsun Chen

Assistant Professor, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
EM

Eunjeong Ma

Pohang University of Science and Technology

WS

Wayne Soon

University of Minnesota

Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

9:30am EDT

A2. Bodies, Values, Materiality
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Pablo Gómez, Embodied Economies of Freedom: Afro-Caribbean Corporeal Finance in the Seventeenth Century ([email protected])
2. Adam Warren, Ability's Experts: Healers and the Assessment and Diagnosis of Enslaved Litigants in Colonial Lima and Buenos Aires ([email protected])
3. Elizabeth O'Brien, “She answered everything except [where the fetus was]”: Medicine and evangelization in the Santa Clara de Asís Mission, 1777-1833 ([email protected])
4. Mariana Labarca, Medical Opinion at the Real Audiencia: How Healers Inspected, Interpreted, and Valued the Human Body in Eighteenth-Century Chile ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
GS

Gabriela Soto LaVeaga

Harvard University

Speakers
ML

Mariana Labarca

University of Santiago

PG

Pablo Gómez

University of Wisconsin, Madison
AW

Adam Warren

University of Washington
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

9:30am EDT

A3. Women, Aging, and Chronic Disease
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Martha N. Gardner, “Yet to see a decline”: the gendered experience of smoking and lung cancer in American women, 1950s-90s ([email protected])
2. Jesse F. Ballenger, “A Completely Unexplained Feature of Alzheimer’s Disease:” Gender, Senility, and Medical Science in Modern Society ([email protected])
3. Cara Kiernan Fallon, Freedom from Disease and Disability: Healthy Aging in Women from the “New Grandma” to the Zumba Grandma, 1930-2010 ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
KS

Kavita Sivaramakrishnan

Columbia University
Speakers
JF

Jesse F. Ballenger

Drexel Univesity

avatar for Martha N. Gardner

Martha N. Gardner

Mass. Coll of Pharm and Health Sciences


CK

Cara Kiernan Fallon

Yale University


Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

9:30am EDT

A4. Disability and Reproduction in the United States
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Miriam Rich, Women’s Reproductive Anxieties and Imaginaries of Disability in the Progressive Era ([email protected])
2. Emma Wathen, “Stop Being a Polio Patient, Be a Mother”: Polio Mothers and Parenting Narratives in the Postwar United States ([email protected])

This panel brings together work from historians who study disability and reproduction in the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Histories of reproduction in the United States have often overlooked disability as an analytical category and disabled people as reproductive agents. In line with disability studies scholarship, the collective work of these historians positions disability as both a discourse that has been used to create and defend racial and gender hierarchies, and a lived experience that shaped the reproductive lives of many women in the United States. Examining the portraits, letters, and memoirs of mothers with and without disabilities, this panel explores how American mothers in different eras contended with (and sometimes countered) ableism, whether through fears about congenital disability or assumptions about the maternal fitness of visibly and publicly disabled women. It calls attention to the ways race, gender, and class intersected with disability. Analyzing the active and intentional demonstration of deafness and motherhood in the portrait of Eliza Clerc, Hull demonstrates the imperative role that d/Deaf women like Clerc had in the creation of American Sign Language, the foundation of the American Deaf community, and the advent of deaf education in the nineteenth-century United States. Turning to the Progressive Era, Miriam Rich explores how lay discourse on reproduction encoded complex and contested imaginaries of congenital disability, becoming a site where diverse women worked out questions and anxieties related to racial descent, gendered family structures, environmental determinants of development, and disabled motherhood. Finally, Emma Wathen investigates how, in the wake of the Salk vaccine, American “polio mothers” called attention to the continuing reproductive needs of polio survivors and reinforced their belonging within the status quo of the white, middle-class nuclear family at a time when women with disabilities were widely deemed to be unfit wives and mothers. Foregrounding disability and disabled people, this panel highlights innovative work from emerging scholars in the fields of disability and reproductive history.

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
HM

Hilary Marland

University of Warwick
Speakers
MR

Miriam Rich

University of Texas

avatar for Emma Wathen

Emma Wathen

PhD Candidate, University of Wisconsin-Madison
(she/her) I am a PhD candidate pursuing a joint degree in History and History of Science, Medicine, and Technology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I study disability and reproduction in the twentieth-century United States, drawing from the fields of disability studies, U.S... Read More →
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

9:30am EDT

A5. Reframing the History of 19th century Medicine
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
The 19th century in the history of medicine has been viewed as an era of epistemic changes brought about by the advent of the germ theory and the rise of laboratory medicine. While building upon these existing frameworks, this panel makes a historiographical intervention in our understanding of 19th-century medicine by adopting a polycentric approach, expanding the canvas of actors and institutions, ideas and practices as well as bodies and spaces associated with medicine.

This roundtable brings together four speakers who illustrate the dynamism of 19th-century medicine by reorienting our understanding of familiar themes through race medicine, psychiatry, death, and sexuality. Focusing on the use of race in 19th-century medicine, Suman Seth unpacks one of the deepest contradictions of race medicine that was based on differentiating between black and white bodies while simultaneously using black subjects to understand diseases that afflicted white bodies. Sohini Chattopadhyay highlights the significance of death and display, focusing on the prototype of vertical burial pits as a British imperial invention to conceal starvation-related famine deaths and limit expenses while reinforcing divisions of caste and community. Arnav Bhattacharya revises the Eurocentric focus of the Foucauldian argument of the medicalization of sexuality in the 19th century by revealing how disparate sites ranging from Beirut to Bombay influenced the production of sexological knowledge, the practice of sexology, and the diagnosis and treatment of sexual disorders. Through such themes, this roundtable opens up a wider cast of “experts”, social differences, locations, and practices to rethink the assumed characteristics of 19th-century medicine.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  1. To reframe our understanding of 19th-century medicine by expanding on the set of actors, practices, institutions, and locations usually associated with major historical developments in that era.
  2. To unpack how historical developments in race medicine, psychiatry, sexual health, as well as the management of the dead, are relevant for medical practice today, as they overlap with core questions of social identity and bioethics in medicine.
  3. The roundtable directly speaks to the issue of the social determinants of medicine as well as the equitable and inclusive representation of health practitioners by highlighting how these were historically relevant concerns even in the 19th century.
Moderators
SS

Suman Seth

Cornell University

Speakers
KM

Karim Malak

Wagner College
SC

Sohini Chattopadhyay

Assistant Professor, Union College


avatar for Arnav Bhattacharya

Arnav Bhattacharya

University of Pennsylvania
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

9:30am EDT

A6. Cross-Cultural Understandings of Madness and the Supernatural
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Wendy Turner, Unhealthy Minds: Premodern Understanding of Mental Health and Intellectual Disabilities ([email protected])
2. Stephanie Boyle, Spiritual Medicine: The role of space and place in healing in the Egyptian Delta in the 19th Century ([email protected])
3. Marlis Hinckley, Natural and supernatural healthcare in New Spain ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
AR

Alisha Rankin

Professor of History, Tufts University
Speakers
avatar for Wendy J Turner

Wendy J Turner

Professor of History, Augusta University
I work on disability history through the lens of law. This includes mental health, intellectual disabilities, medicine, the brain, injury, and impairment. 
MH

Marlis Hinckley

University of Notre Dame

Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Roosevelt Room

9:30am EDT

A7. Nurses and the Nursing Profession
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Alisa Haushalter, Marie Gill, and Kelly Fulkerson Dikuua The Role of Nursing Theory ThinkTanks in Advancing Nursing Knowledgeand Theory: A historical qualitative study utilizing the Margaret NewmanArchive, 1978-1988
2. Andrej Toth, Building a Modern Nurse: State Policy,Philanthropy, and theProfessionalization of Nursing inInterwar Czechoslovakia (1918–1938)
3. Elizabeth Ahern and Emily Barr, Light, Order, and Authority: VisualizingNursing and Sanitary Science at Scutari
4. Jess Dillard-Wright, Nurses not Nursing: The Profession and Social Movements

The Pearl Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Pearl Room is located above the Fitness Center.  Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
KC

Kim Curry

University of Florida

Speakers
EB

Emily Barr

University at Buffalo School of Nursing

AR

Alisa R. Haushalter

Director, Shelby County Health Department

AT

Andrej Toth

Prague University of Economics and Business

JD

Jess Dillard-Wright

University of Massachusetts Amherst

Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Pearl Room

12:30pm EDT

B1. Violence, Children, and the State in the 20th century
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
1. Deborah B Doroshow, From Classroom to Cop Car: Florida’s Baker Act and the Criminalization of Children’s Behavior ([email protected])
2. Lisa J. Pruitt, Celebrity Surgeon and “Healer of Children”: Dr. Adolf Lorenz in Buffalo and the Power of Publicity, 1923-1924 ([email protected])
3. Geremy D. Lowe, These Are Their Risk Factors: Epidemiology and the Public Health Investigation of the Atlanta Child Murders, 1980-1982 ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
AH

Andrew Hogan

Creighton
Speakers
LJ

Lisa J. Pruitt

Middle Tennessee State University

avatar for Deborah Doroshow

Deborah Doroshow

Assistant Professor of Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

avatar for Geremy D. Lowe

Geremy D. Lowe

University of California, San Francisco
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

12:30pm EDT

B2. Scalpels, Spectacles and Iron Hands: The Early Modern Medical Marketplace at Work
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
1. Heidi Hausse, Wear and Tear: An Inside Look at a “Used” Sixteenth-Century Prosthetic Hand ([email protected])
2. Samuel Paek, Amputations, Expertise, and the Rise of New Genres of Medical Writing in Sixteenth-Century England ([email protected])
3. Tawrin Baker, The Medicalization of Spectacles in the Seventeenth Century: Assisting and Curing via Mathematical Arts and Crafts ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
ER

Evan Ragland

University of Notre Dame

Speakers
HH

Heidi Hausse

Auburn University

SP

Samuel Paek

University of Notre Dame


TB

Tawrin Baker

Independent Scholar

Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

12:30pm EDT

B3. Women, Risk, Public Health, and the Law
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
1. Elizabeth Sapere, “We Are All Unfit Mothers”: Baby M and the Surrogacy Wars in the 1980s ([email protected])
2. Joanna Federico, External Causes? Conceptualizations of Violence in American Public Health Before the Dickey Amendment (1887 – 1993) ([email protected])
3. Shannon Withycombe, Preserving Her Life: Medical Exceptions in Nineteenth-Century Abortion Laws in the U.S. ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
LR

Leslie Reagan

Professor, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Speakers
ES

Elizabeth Sapere

University of Rochester


JF

Joanna Federico

Rutgers University

SW

Shannon Withycombe

University of New Mexico
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

12:30pm EDT

B4. Imperial Health, Colonial Bodies
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
1. Kristin Brig-Ortiz, Springs and Cemeteries: Urban Public Health, Water Management, and Burial Ground Surveillance in Colonial South Africa, 1880-1910 ([email protected])
2. Kalman Rotstein, The Fear of Premature Burial and the Campaign for Death Certification in Fin-de-Siècle Britain ([email protected])
3. Ogechukwu Williams, Bodies, Blame, and Birth: Historicizing Maternal Mortality Discourses in Nigeria ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
NB

Nandini Bhattacharya

Professor of South Asian History and History of Medicine, University of Houston
Historian. Colonial South Asia, pharmaceuticals, alcohol and narcotics, labour and plantations
Speakers
KB

Kristin Brig-Ortiz

Washington University

KR

Kalman Rotstein

Binghamton University
OW

Ogechukwu Williams

Associate Professor, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

12:30pm EDT

B5. Medicine and the Senses in Asia: Regional Stories
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
While historians of medicine are keenly aware of the importance of sensorial knowledge and practice in healing, most studies have focused on Western societies and the five conventional senses. By discussing medicine and the senses in Asia, this first roundtable, together with a related one submitted separately, aims to reconceptualize what constitutes the senses by exploring a wide range of sensorial conditions and techniques in various Asian healing cultures, from East, South, and Southeast Asia to the Near East. Furthermore, the discussion seeks to shed light on the connection between the senses and culture, gender, and politics in various Asian contexts.

Lisa Brooks discusses the central role of touch in the ontology, epistemology, diagnostics, and treatments of first-millennium Ayurvedic medicine, through which to reveal constructions of gendered interactions and embodied knowledge in premodern South Asian medical sources. Lan Li discusses the sense of ma in premodern Chinese medical and literary sources, a word that denotes a common plant yet encapsulates a multiplicity of sensations related to plant-human relations, including flavor, touch, and pain. Saghar Bozorgi discusses the role of embodied practices in healing mental illness, through oral history narratives of 1960s and 1970s Iran, demonstrating how the senses of non-human creatures could directly impact a human’s mental well-being. Finally, Nicole Barnes discusses the odor of night soil, or “humanure,” in modern China, illustrating how sensitivity to the stench of humanure and its related health concerns became politically mobilized in the Mao era.

Collectively, this roundtable intends to expand our understanding of the senses by bringing key Asian perspectives into the conversation. We also hope that medicine and the senses can be a useful window through which to acquire deeper insights into a given Asian society.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of medicine
  • Understand the dynamic history of medical ideas and practices, their implications for patients and health care providers, and the need for lifelong learning
  • Recognize the dynamic interrelationship between medicine and society through history

Moderators
RR

Ruth Rogaski

Vanderbilt University
Speakers
LL

Lan Li

Johns Hopkins University
SB

Saghar Bozorgi

Princeton University


NB

Nicole Barnes

Duke University

Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

12:30pm EDT

B6. Environmental Justice and the Historian
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
This roundtable explores the intersection between environmental justice and histories of health and medicine. The environmental justice movement emerged from protest cultures of the late 1980s, culminating in the 1991 First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in Washington DC, and codified within the EPA in 1994.  While “environmental justice” as an actors’ term is both relatively recent and US-focused, it also serves as an analytic category, enabling an exploration of health, place, and dispossession across broader geographies and temporalities.  By highlighting the intersections of toxic risks and marginalization along economic, ethnic, and racial lines, environmental justice redefined environmentalism to address differential impacts.   Historians of health and medicine have something unique to offer and to learn from close engagement with environmental justice: as a historical moment, as a mode of historical analysis, and as a mode of engaged history.  Merlin Chowkwanyun will speak on how new methodologies and data allow us to broaden our notions of "environmental justice" and to interrogate the legal history that has largely been narrated -- sometimes accurately, sometimes less so -- by EJ activists themselves.   Matt Klingle will take a broader history of environmental justice as the entwined changes to planetary, bodily and social metabolisms from the late 19th century to the present day, with particular focus on diabetes in relation to rural and indigenous healfh.  Jason Chernesky will explore how 1980s healthcare workers, particularly pediatric nurses during the HIV-AIDS crisis, understood environmental inequalities and shaped ecologies of care in marginalized populations in American cities. Rick Mizelle and Harriet Washington use lead poisoning to situate case studies of environmental racism. In Mizelle’s story, EJ becomes an analyst’s category, following lead toxicity from the Civil Rights era to the Flint and Jackson Water Crises.   Washington in turn examines how efforts to address environmental racism in the form of lead poisoning in communities of color, have repeatedly been undermined by the medicalization of diagnoses like pica, which putatively led children of color to ingest lead-paint flakes in heavy-metal-imbued housing. Jeremy Greene will highlight intertwined methods of history as advocacy in communities facing health harms from medical incinerators. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Understand the history of environmental justice as inextricably linked to the history of health and medicine
  • Explore the intersection and divergences between

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
JG

Jeremy Greene

Johns Hopkins University
Speakers
MC

Merlin Chowkwanyun

Columbia University
MK

Matt Klingle

Bowdoin College

avatar for Jason Chernesky

Jason Chernesky

CLIR Postdocoral Fellow, Food and Drug Administration History Office
RM

Richard Mizelle

University of Houston
HW

Harriet Washington

Columbia University

Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Roosevelt Room

12:30pm EDT

B7. Nursing in the South
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
1. Christine Ardalan, Nurses Among the Florida Seminole sand Miccosukee, 1934-1971
2. Charlotte Swint, Bringing Nursing and Medical Care toWest Alabama: A Retrospective Reviewof West Alabama Health
3. Valeria Eadler and Alisa R. Haushalter, Services from the 1970s to 2000s A Century of Public Health Nursing:Archival and Material-Culture Evidence from a Southern State

​The Pearl Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Pearl Room is located above the Fitness Center.  Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
JD

Jess Dillard-Wright

University of Massachusetts Amherst

Speakers
CA

Christine Ardalan

Independent Scholar

avatar for Charlotte Swint

Charlotte Swint

Associate Professor, Frontier Nursing University


avatar for Valeria Eadler

Valeria Eadler

Middle Tennessee State University


AR

Alisa R. Haushalter

Director, Shelby County Health Department

Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Pearl Room

2:15pm EDT

C1. Gender and Health in the 1960s
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
1. Andrew Hogan, “Allied Health” in the 1960s: Women’s Professions, Men’s Ambitions ([email protected])
2. Kelly O'Donnell, The Valley of the Dolls and the Cultural History of Medicine: Sex, Drugs, and Health Politics in the 1960s ([email protected])
3. Andrew Pothier, Therapeutic Community Behind Bars: Experiments in Correctional and Community Rehabilitation in the Adirondacks, 1960–1975.” ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
avatar for Deborah Doroshow

Deborah Doroshow

Assistant Professor of Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Speakers
avatar for Andrew Hogan

Andrew Hogan

Creighton University
KO

Kelly O'Donnell

Towson University

AJ

Andrew J. Pothier

University at Buffalo, SUNY

Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

2:15pm EDT

C2. The New Modern Medicine: 'Epidemiological', 'Multifactorial' ,'Risky', 'Evidence-Based', 'Personalized', or 'Postmodern?'
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Popular medical history often discusses the rise of ‘modern medicine’ in the 19th or 20th century. Critical medical history problematizes the idea. In his forthcoming academic book The New Modern Medicine: Disease, Evidence, and Epidemiological Medicine (OUP, 2025), Jonathan Fuller revives the idea of modern medicine as a legitimate historical and philosophical problem. This author-meets-critics roundtable will discuss the book’s argument and themes raised by it. The New Modern Medicine argues that scientific medicine made medicine modern. But scientific medicine needs further theorizing. It was once associated with the rise of the experimental laboratory, but this narrow rendering misses the point that scientific medicine is shifting and continues to serve as ground on which new battles for scientific authority are fought, though typically under different terms. Scholarly reflection on the characteristics of scientific medicine can help counteract or at least clarify cultural narratives such as evidence-based medicine and personalized medicine. The New Modern Medicine argues that the new modern scientific medicine since the second world war is epidemiological: many of the concepts and methods of epidemiology became the concepts and methods of clinical medicine. ‘Epidemiological medicine’ weaves together several threads in medical historiography, including contemporary multifactorial conceptions of disease etiology, and the pervasiveness of epidemiological risk in medicine. However, we should also question whether medicine is becoming postmodern, less dominated by the hegemony of mainstream scientific orthodoxy. This roundtable includes historians who have explored some of these themes, especially modern epidemiology and its relationship to medicine. The session will proceed as follows. In speaking slots of approximately 10 min each, the author will summarize the book’s argument, before each of three discussants offers commentary. Then the author will respond before the roundtable discussion enlarges to include the audience for approximately 40 min.

Chair email: [email protected]
 
Learning Outcomes
  • Develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of medicine
  • Promote tolerance for ambiguity of theories, the nature of evidence, and the evaluation of appropriate patient care, research, and education
  • Understand the dynamic history of medical ideas and practices, their implications for patients and health care providers, and the need for lifelong learning

Moderators
avatar for Sloane Wesloh

Sloane Wesloh

PhD candidate, History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh

Speakers
CP

Christopher Phillips

Carnegie Mellon University

JF

Jonathan Fuller

University of Pittsburgh

EH

Emily Harrison

Wellesley College
RA

Robert Aronowitz

University of Pennsylvania
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

2:15pm EDT

C3. Between Marginalization and Medicalization
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
1. Ben Maldonado,  Labor, Sex, and the Construction of “Normal Aging” at the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, 1950-1980 ([email protected])
2. Maud Jansen, “The Age Factor” in Hip Fracture Care: How Precarity Shaped Therapeutic Change ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
CK

Cara Kiernan Fallon

Yale University


Speakers
BM

Ben Maldonado

Harvard University
MJ

Maud Jansen

Harvard University
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

2:15pm EDT

C4. Institutions of Maternity Care
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
1. Hilary Marland, ‘Enlarging her capacity as a mother’: Mother and Baby Units and Maternal Mental Illness in Postwar Britain ([email protected])
2. Corey Schultz, Debating Juice: The Controversial History of Fruit Juice in WIC food packages ([email protected])
3. Janet Greenlees, ‘The subject of heated controversy’: maternity care and the unmarried mother in post-World War 1 United States ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
ML

Megann Licskai

Yale University
Speakers
CS

Corey Schultz

Graduate Student, University of Rochester


HM

Hilary Marland

University of Warwick
JG

Janet Greenlees

Associate Professor of Health History, Glasgow Caledonian University

Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

2:15pm EDT

C5. Medicine and the Senses in Asia: Cross-Cultural Stories
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
This roundtable highlights the cross-cultural exchange of sensorial knowledge and practice between different healing cultures within Asia and between Asia and the West. Each participant’s case study reveals a dynamic process of translocal interplay in forming emergent understandings about the senses in relation to the body, conditioned by commercial interests, religious aspirations, and colonial influences. Yan Liu examines how transregional exchange of aromatics from West, South, and Southeast Asia—like saffron, camphor, and frankincense—shaped the production of olfactory knowledge and its relation to medical practice among Chinese physicians in the medieval period. Claire Cooper investigates how “mummy medicine,” as knowledge and commodity, was translated from early modern Dutch pharmacopeia into Japanese medical treatises, and the multisensorial ethical concerns that emerged in Japan from the idea of consuming the dead. Genie Yoo explores the role of the body and the senses in Islamicate understandings of spirit possession and exorcism in early modern and modern Indonesia, with an emphasis on the medical and magical potency of Quranic verses in their recited, written, and edible forms. Finally, Ling Ma illuminates how Euro-American missionary surgeons based in China at the turn of the twentieth century relied on touch to establish trademark “modern” methods in diagnosing and treating the birthing body of Chinese women. Paying attention to both local and transregional dynamics influenced by the circulation of commodities, ideas, and people, this second roundtable, together with a related one submitted separately, invites participants and attendees to rethink the role of the senses in medicine and society across regions and time periods, while bringing a diversity of Asian perspectives into the conversation.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of medicine
  • Understand the dynamic history of medical ideas and practices, their implications for patients and health care providers, and the need for lifelong learning
  • Recognize the dynamic interrelationship between medicine and society through history

Moderators
PG

Pablo Gómez

University of Wisconsin, Madison
Speakers
GY

Genie Yoo

University at Buffalo, SUNY

YL

Yan Liu

University at Buffalo, SUNY

avatar for Claire Cooper

Claire Cooper

Assistant Professor, Eastern Kentucky University
I am a historian of material and intellectual exchange in Japan from roughly 1600 to 1900, with a particular focus on the trading and consumption of medicine and medicinal substances. 
LM

Ling Ma

State University of New York, Geneseo

Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

2:15pm EDT

C6. COVID-Studies: The History of Medicine Meets Disaster
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
While many people, politicians, and policymakers seek to “move on” from COVID-19, scientists and survivors are still coming to know, and struggling to understand, its features and impacts. Origin stories double as foreign policy battles; denialism gives way to agnotology. But the social worlds that made the COVID-19 pandemic into the most resounding disaster of our times are well known to us; they are inheritances, and they have historical structure. Although it no longer drives our headlines, we suggest that we are still researching and writing from inside the disaster; not formally acknowledged as a pandemic anymore by global health officials, but nevertheless a disaster in its toll on life, health, economy, safety, and justice. In fact, COVID is a nested disaster, a deadly and debilitating virus, tucked inside of an infodemic, woven through traumatically inadequate health systems in the United States and around the world. COVID is also a compound disaster, entangled with climatic disasters of land, air, and sea, and grinding against the tragedies of migration, war, and political dysfunction. These modes of analysis take COVID and its lessons out of the museum of past disasters, where powerful people and institutions want it to remain, and put it right back into the middle of our lives, where it belongs for now, and surely for a very long time to come. The pandemic also quickly changed the ways many people lived their daily lives--a sense of history helps as we watch the disastrous become quotidian. 

This roundtable brings together the history of medicine and disaster studies, connecting scholars eager to discuss the archival, methodological, and political problems posed by researching the the history of pandemics from inside a pandemic. While uniform in their commitments to historical knowledge as a necessary tool for survival in a disaster, the participants come from different scholarly traditions, with differential commitments and strategies for public engagement. The roundtable will allow these many perspectives to be heard, and audience members will actively participate in the conversation. Participants will include George Aumoithe, Jih-Fei Cheng, Gregg Gonsalves, Monica Green, Scott Gabriel Knowles, Jacob Steere-Williams, and Jacqueline Wernimont.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
This roundtable will provide participants practical skills in understanding historiographical trends in the history of medicine and in disaster studies. Additionally it will allow participants to see history as an unfolding set of conflicts, resolved through the deployment of political power, expertise, and dispoute. Participants will appreciate the ways that medicine and society co-structure each other as dynamic spaces of human action. Lastly, participants will hear under-represented voices in history, and see the importance of full inclusivity in the formation of historical archives.

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
SK

Scott Knowles

Northeastern University

Speakers
JS

Jacob Steere-Williams

Professor, Department of History, College of Charleston

GA

george aumoithe

Assistant Professor of History and of African and African American Studies, Harvard University
JW

Jacqueline Wernimont

Dartmouth College

JC

Jih-Fei Cheng

Associate Professor, Scripps College


MH

Monica H. Green

2026 AAHM Garrison Lecturer, Independent Scholar
GG

Gregg Gonsalves

Research Scholar in Law, Lecturer in Law, & Co-Director, Global Health Justice Partnership, Yale University
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Roosevelt Room

2:15pm EDT

C7. Teaching Nursing History
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
1. Darlla Thompson, From Camp to Clinic: Teaching Nursing History Through the Legacy of Pauline Bray Fletcher and Simulation-Based Learning
2. Sally Ellis Fletcher, Integrating History into a Time Limited Guest Lecture
3. Amber P. Williams, Understanding our roots: engaging students in the history of nursing
4. Cassondra Burks, Using AI in Course Development for a Nursing History Course

​The Pearl Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Pearl Room is located above the Fitness Center.  Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
MG

Mary Gibson

Associate Professor Emerita, University of Virginia
Speakers
SE

Sally Ellis Fletcher

University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Nursing and Health Studies

avatar for Cassie Burks

Cassie Burks

University of Tennessee at Martin
avatar for Darlla Thompson, DNP, MPH, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC

Darlla Thompson, DNP, MPH, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC

Assistant Professor, Troy University
The Nursing Museum of Alabama website serves as an educational and community‑focused digital hub dedicated to preserving and promoting the history, contributions, and impact of nursing in Alabama. The site highlights nursing heritage, educational resources, public outreach initiatives... Read More →
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Pearl Room

4:00pm EDT

D1. Flash Talks
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT

1. Justin Barr, Look into My Heart: Cardioscopes, Technology, and Heart Surgery in the 20th Century ([email protected])
2. Ken Sullivan, Tracing the Disability Discourse: Women Healers and Premodern European Disability History from the 4th to 17th Century ([email protected])
3. Adia Cullors, "Black Powder, Bio-Revolt, and the Black Atlantic": Gunpowder and Medical Resistance 1700 -1899  ([email protected])
4. Yemok Jeon, Translating Ginseng: Korean Efforts to Prove the Medicinal Effects of Ginseng through Biomedical Language, 1960s–1970s ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
NT

Nancy Tomes

Professor of History, Stony Brook University
Speakers
JB

Justin Barr

Ochsner Clinic

KS

Ken Sullivan

Louisiana State University


AC

Adia Cullors

New York University

YJ

Yemok Jeon

PhD Student, Johns Hopkins University
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

4:00pm EDT

D2. Mentorship Workshop: Insights From Faculty, Staff, and Postdocs for Students
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
The AAHM Student Affairs Committee is happy to be reprising our mentorship workshop for the third year. In this workshop, students and more established professionals in academia, libraries, archives, and museums will break into small groups to chat about the job search, funding, publishing, and more. We will have prompts on hand, but please bring questions of your own. This is a great opportunity to hear candid advice from people who have been where you are, and to kickstart new relationships in the process.

Chair email: [email protected]

Speakers
JH

Jessica Hester

Johns Hopkins University

Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

4:00pm EDT

D3. Collaborative Histories of Institutionalization: Archives, Activism, and Access
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
This proposed roundtable presents several new, innovative projects in the public history of institutionalization. Participants come from across disciplines including History, Media Studies, Library and Information Science, American Studies, and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. We will highlight the importance and complexity of collaboration–with disabled activists and community members, undergraduates, other scholars, and even corporations–in bringing hidden histories to light. Caitlin Angelone will highlight the newly opened archive at Elwyn, an active service organization wrestling with preserving both its own dark history and its modern reputation. Brenda Brueggemann will present on three years of work with UConn undergraduates to preserve and interpret the archives and history of the Mansfield Training School. Ashten Vassar-Cain and Jess Petrazzuoli-Gallagher will share their current efforts to expand access to materials from Speaking For Ourselves, one of the nation’s first self-advocacy organizations, as part of a community-controlled digitization project. Finally, Heather Cassano and Chelsea Chamberlain (also Chair), will discuss the Institution Cemetery Project, an in-progress website that maps the locations and memorialization statuses of institution cemeteries across the United States. Taken together, we hope that presenters and audience members will have a productive discussion about collaboration in public history, the ethical challenges posed by institutional records, the limits of medicalized sources and narratives, and how efforts to preserve and share disability histories can promote justice in the present.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Acquire a historically nuanced understanding of the organization of the U.S. healthcare system, and of other national health care systems
  • Develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of medicine

Moderators
CC

Chelsea Chamberlain

Wilkes University

Speakers
AV

Ashten Vassar-Cain

Pennhurst Memorial and Preservation Alliance

JP

Jess Petrazzuoli-Gallagher

Co-Vice President, Pennhurst Memorial and Preservation Alliance


Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

4:00pm EDT

D4. Negotiating Norms: Biomedicine in the 20th century
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
1. Caroline Wechsler, Standardizing syndromes: Clinical scoring systems in genetic connective tissue disorders ([email protected])
2. Sofia Grant, Blocked Impulses: Myasthenia Gravis, the Prostigmin Test, and the Making of a Clinical Diagnosis in Midcentury America ([email protected])
3. Adrien Gau, Of Monolids and Medicine: On the racialization of upper-eyelid blepharoplasty ([email protected])
4. Melody Slavnik-Xu, In the Eye of the Beholder: the Use of Film and Video in the Mackworth Eye-Tracking Devices (1945-1975) ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
MS

Mindy Schwartz

University of Chicago Medicine

Speakers
CW

Caroline Wechsler

Graduate Student, University of Pennsylvania

SG

Sofia Grant

Johns Hopkins University
AG

Adrien Gau

University of Pennsylvania
MS

Melody Slavnik-Xu

Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

4:00pm EDT

D5. Doing Health History Across the Contemporary University
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Health historians are facing important challenges in the current higher education climate. While our courses add significant value to undergraduate, graduate, and professional education, their very premises are under assault from attacks on classroom speech and curricular content. An unprecedented termination of federal support for science and humanities research and education has created a resource crisis for public and private institutions alike, with direct and indirect effects for the health humanities. Histories of the health sciences link diverse spaces in the university: the undergraduate classroom, graduate programs, and professional training in nursing, public health, and medical schools. Yet in an atmosphere of retrenchment, the structures by which we collectively bridge these different parts of campus are themselves under threat. 

This roundtable offers an opportunity to reflect upon these challenges and to develop strategies for facing them. It shares the perspectives of program directors in a range of settings—private and public, schools of health sciences and arts and sciences—to address scholarly vulnerabilities and tactics for resilience in the face of shrinking resources, new pedagogical threats, and collapsing support for inquiry into some of the principal axes of health humanities research, including (but not limited to) health disparities research. We seek to engage with an audience of peers to share concerns and learn about the experiences of health historians at all levels—graduate, professional, tenure-track, contingent—as a means of fostering scholarly community and building strength during a moment of exceptional precarity. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Participants will learn about significant challenges facing medical humanities programs in a range of settings.
  • Participants will develop critical thinking skills in the areas of pedagogy, humanities research, and program administration.
  • Participants will be able to strategize about ways to build resilience in the face of adversity.


Moderators
avatar for Richard Keller

Richard Keller

University of Wisconsin-Madison
Contemporary history of Europe and global medicine and public health; disease ecology; social determinants of vulnerability; health implications of disaster
Speakers
KS

Kavita Sivaramakrishnan

Columbia University
BL

Beth Linker

University of Pennsylvania

JG

Jeremy Greene

Johns Hopkins University
DT

Dominique Tobbell

University of Virginia

MC

Merlin Chowkwanyun

Columbia University
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

4:00pm EDT

D6. Meeting the Moment: History of Medicine and Activism
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
In this innovative workshop specially designed by the Program Committee, three leading historians of health and medicine discuss the multi-faceted ways that scholars can respond to contemporary political dialogue and debate. Topics for this workshop include local political activism, op-ed writing to national and international audiences, and engaging scholarly voices to "meet the moment" of the present.

Chair email: [email protected]

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
avatar for Samuel Roberts

Samuel Roberts

Associate Professor of History & Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University
No longer on MuskX. Find me at @skroberts.bsky.social. 
Speakers
RK

Regina Kunzel

Yale University

JG

Janet Golden

Rutgers University
JD

Jim Downs

Gettysburg College

Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Roosevelt Room

4:00pm EDT

D7. Nurse Training and Education
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
1. Sarah Saffa, The Kiowa School of Practical Nursing:Its Role Within and Beyond the US Indian Service
2. Karen Anne Wolf, The Nurse Practitioner (NP) Experiment: MGH – CharlestownBunker Hill Pediatric NP Program
3. Kim Curry, The Historical Foundations of Advanced Nursing Education

​The Pearl Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Pearl Room is located above the Fitness Center.  Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
DC

Donna Curry

Wright State University

Speakers
SS

Sarah Saffa

Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences

KA

Karen Anne Wolf

Independent Scholar

KC

Kim Curry

University of Florida

Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Pearl Room
 
Saturday, June 6
 

10:15am EDT

E1. Nursing, Labor, and Collective Action
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
1. Reynaldo Capucao, Matters of Discipline: Unrest at the Philippine General Hospital, 1910–1916 ([email protected])
2. Hafeeza Anchrum, Exploited, Still: Black Women’s Care Labor from Domestic Service to the Professional Workforce ([email protected])
3. Bradford Pelletier, Striking for the Patients: Medical Civil Rights & Labor Equity at the South Carolina State Hospital (1964-1984) ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
DT

Dominique Tobbell

University of Virginia

Speakers
avatar for Reynaldo Capucao

Reynaldo Capucao

Mellon Race, Place, and Equity Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Virginia-Main Campus
HA

Hafeeza Anchrum

University of Pennsylvania

BP

Bradford Pelletier

The University of Virginia School of Nursing

Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:15am EDT

E2. Madness, Medicine, and Materiality Across the Atlantic World
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
1. Olivia Weisser, The Dreaded Pox and Household Medicine in Early Modern England ([email protected])
2. Francesca Gibson, Hysterical Conceptions: Madness, Reproduction, and Race in the Early Modern British Atlantic World ([email protected])
3. Evan Ragland, Disease, Pathological Anatomy, and the Question of Causes in Early Modern Europe ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
avatar for Jennifer Kosmin

Jennifer Kosmin

Auburn University
Speakers
OW

Olivia Weisser

University of Massachusetts-Boston

FG

Francesca Gibson

PhD Student, University of California, Santa Cruz


ER

Evan Ragland

University of Notre Dame

Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:15am EDT

E3. What Can A Pharmacist Do? A History of 20th c. Pharmaceutical Professionalization in Japan and China
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
1. JJ Strange, Growing Medicine: Huang Minlong and the rise and fall of botanical pharmaceutical research in twentieth-century China ([email protected])
2. Yaming You, Reinventing Bencao: The Manchurian Medical College and Traditional Chinese Medicinal Drugs in Japan’s Informal empire, 1910s-1940s ([email protected])
3. Minji Kim, Unattributable Harm and State Compensation: The (In)visibility of the Agent Orange Issue in South Korea since the 1990s ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
LR

Lucas Richert

University of Wisconsin-Madison

Speakers
JS

JJ Strange

University of Wisconsin-Madison

YY

Yaming You

Duke University


MK

Minji Kim

Sogang University

Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:15am EDT

E4. Comparative Histories of Gender, Health, and Risk
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
1. Hayley C. Roy, Imperial Obstetrics: Training Secular Nurses for Germany's Overseas Colonies, 1884 – 1904 ([email protected])
2. Victoria Pihl Sørensen, Intrauterine Devices, Eugenics, and Reproductive Injustice in Denmark and Kalaallit Nunaat ([email protected])
3. Andrea Tone, Dangerous Beauty or Acceptable Risk? The American Medical Association, Cosmetics, and Consumer Health ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
JS

Johanna Schoen

Rutgers University
Speakers
AT

Andrea Tone

Professor, McGill University


VP

Victoria Pihl Sørensen

University of Colorado, Boulder

HC

Hayley C. Roy

Emory University

Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:15am EDT

E5. Sexual Knowledge, Medical Power: Reframing the History of Sexology
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Sexology, beginning with Heinrich Kaan’s Psychopathia Sexualis in 1844, has presented itself as a rigorous and objective science while simultaneously addressing medical and health concerns, often seeking to apply findings for clinical and therapeutic ends. Tensions over whether sexology has been descriptive or therapeutic, neutral or activist, and normalizing or pathologizing partly reflect these tensions between scientific origins and medical applications. 


This disciplinary duality has also shaped the historiography of sexology. This history has developed largely through science and technology studies (STS), the history of sexuality, and the history of science. While these approaches have been fruitful, the contributions of historians of medicine to the history of sexology have been less clearly defined. Given the medical backgrounds of many sexologists, medical questions and applications, and the significance of sex therapy and sexual medicine, medical histories of the discipline are necessary. Some recent histories of transgender medicine, psychiatry, and fertility have shown possibilities of medical histories of sexology, but there is much more to be explored.

This roundtable brings together historians engaged in research into the history of sexology and the sexual sciences to think through the benefits and limitations of a “history of medicine” approach to sexology. Sophia DeLeonibus considers how intersections between sexology, psychoanalysis, and psychiatry informed the making of the category of “gender identity” in the mid-20th century US. Donna Drucker considers the role of technology in defining sexology as medical practice. Kirsten Leng examines the role of female sexologists in early-20th century Germany, and the ways in which their work entangled medical and scientific knowledge with desires for social change. Ezra Gerard’s research investigates how medicalized understandings of childhood development were central to sexologists’ constructions of homosexuality. Rachel Louise Moran (speaker/moderator) examines “female sexual dysfunction” in the mid-20th century US, and tensions between psychiatric and physiological solutions. Sohini Mukhopadhyay explores the great diversity of the “unruly appropriations” of Euro-American sexology in turn-of-the-century Bengal, including the role of doctors. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Moderators
RL

Rachel Louise Moran

Professor of History, Texas A&M University
Speakers
DD

Donna Drucker

Columbia University
EG

Ezra Gerard

Independent Scholar

KL

Kirsten Leng

Department of Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst
SD

Sophia DeLeonibus

Yale University


avatar for Sohini Mukhopadhyay

Sohini Mukhopadhyay

PhD candidate, University of Illinois At Chicago
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

10:15am EDT

E6. Doctoring the Birth of Our Country
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Two hundred and fifty years ago, the US declared independence, fighting to win an imperfect freedom from Great Britain’s tyranny.  The fight extended beyond military engagements, with Americans struggling against disease and trauma.  As on the battlefield, they met both success and failure.  Landmark events like George Washington’s mandatory inoculation order and John Jones’ first surgical textbook in the country contrasted with the fact that 90% of American losses resulted from disease.  Throughout, the health of both the troops and the civilian community affected the military strategy and political happenings that eventually resulted in British defeat.

As America celebrates its semiquincentennial, universities, museums, hospitals, and medical centers are honoring the occasion with events – and often asking for assistance from AAHM membership.  This workshop gathers an array of professional perspectives on the subject to discuss not just what happened but more importantly ways to research and represent this past critically.  Discussion will focus on how to convey these stories to students, doctors, and the lay public that not only inspires but also leads to thoughtful contemplation of the constant interplay among medicine, war, and society.  

Historian Erica Charters brings her expertise on disease in warfare to showcase placing these events in a global context, bringing particular insight into relevant archives.   Judy Chelnick, former curator at the Smithsonian American History Museum, will explore preparing exhibitions, large and small, showcasing how to utilize artifacts with minimal words to tell a story.  Trauma surgeon Jeremy Cannon utilizes medicine in the Philadelphia campaign to demonstrate how to work with local history and engage medical students and hospitals in these projects.  Surgeon Per-olaf Hasselgren builds on his biographical work to showcase the utility of exploring a topic through the lives of its actors.  Clinician-historian David Jones discusses his success in transforming academic research into broadly appealing stories featured in the New England Journal of Medicine.  Scott Podolsky speaks in his triptych role as a physician, historian, and Director of Countway Library’s Center for the History of Medicine, emphasizing how medical repositories can help researchers, students, physicians, and the lay public alike explore this exciting topic.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • By the end of this activity, the learner will develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of medicine.
  • By the end of this activity, the learner will deepen understanding of illness and suffering
  • By the end of this activity will identify successes and failures in the history of medical professionalism
  • By the end of this activity will understand the dynamic history of medical ideas and practices, their implications for patients and health care providers, and the need for lifelong learning

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.


Moderators
JB

Justin Barr

Ochsner Clinic

Speakers
EC

Erica Charters

University of Oxford

JC

Judy Chelnick

Smithsonian Institution
JC

Jeremy Cannon

University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine

PH

Per-olaf Hasselgren

Beth Israel Deaconness Medical Center

DJ

David Jones

Harvard University
SP

Scott Podolsky

AAHM Treasurer, Harvard Medical School

Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Roosevelt Room

1:00pm EDT

F1. Health in Civil Rights Movements
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
1. Caine Jordan, The Berry Plan: Policing, Public Health, and Civil Rights in 1950s Chicago ([email protected])
2. Emily Webster, Health and Housing in the Northern Irish Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1972 ([email protected])
3. Pratik Chakrabarti, The Hospital in the Ward: A Documentary of Healing and Resistance ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
AB

Adam Biggs

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Speakers
CJ

Caine Jordan

University of Chicago

avatar for Emily Webster

Emily Webster

Assistant Professor in the History and Philosophy of Health and Medicine, University of Durham

avatar for Pratik Chakrabarti

Pratik Chakrabarti

NEH-Cullen Chair in History and Medicine, University of Houston


Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

1:00pm EDT

F2. Medical Networks: Patients, Publics, and Markets from the Cold War to Neoliberalism
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
1. Eram Alam, In Search of Care: Scenes from the US/Mexico Border ([email protected])
2. Claire Edington, "A War Inside a War: Fighting Drug Addiction During the Decolonization of Vietnam"  ([email protected])
3. Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, From Russia, with Love: The Promise of Indo-Soviet Medical Cooperation and Assistance in Postcolonial India ([email protected])


What does it mean when countries open borders and resources for scientific exchanges and cooperation, care and treatment, and in turn, like today, when these historic moments and ‘openings’ end or close? This panel brings together four papers to explore the mobility and immobility of medical ideas and networks in the 20th-21st century, in the context of the Cold War and post-colonial modernization, and neoliberal projects in Asia, Latin America and Africa. The papers will discuss the pathways of circulation for experts, patients, and the changing aspirations that underlay these partnerships and interactions. Just as medical networks flowed outwards, their founders also addressed internal politics and ideologies, such as interpreting the value of science and socialism; and they were compelled to confront domestic, political rivalries. What did these exchanges represent for hosts in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, and what insights does it offer us on ‘Cold War medicine’ as a diverse and fluid, even contradictory project? How were foreign medical research and technological aid understood and justified in the newly decolonized nations, and what vocabularies and discourses were deployed? How do these networks and collaborations with socialist physicians recast 'western' tropes about backward medical 'peripheries' and developed, 'centers,' that were pervasive in aid discourses with the US ?  These medical networks offer us crucial narratives regarding innovation and self-reliance; and how experts, publics, and patients interacted, and also debates regarding emerging medical markets for care. Our panel will look at the 'afterlives' of medical networks in a neoliberal context when markets and consumer choices lead to patients seeking care across borders, such as between Mexico and the US. How do cultures of aid and medical exchange, also translate later through medical expertise that is marketed to patients as tourists. The papers in our panel will productively address these questions, and critically evaluate medical networks and knowledge and care in transit on border crossing ways.  
Moderators
MA

Michitake Aso

SUNY Albany
Speakers
EA

Eram Alam

Harvard University
CE

Claire Edington

University of California, San Diego

KS

Kavita Sivaramakrishnan

Columbia University
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

1:00pm EDT

F3. Race and Reproduction and the Politics of Care in the Twentieth Century
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
1. Rose Holz, Reproductive Freedom and Racial Reckoning: A Lost History of Planned Parenthood’s Mid-Twentieth Century ([email protected])
2. Molly Yeo ([email protected]) and Dominique Tobbell ([email protected]), Polio during Segregation: Black Nurses' and Communities'Contributions to Polio Prevention, Care, and Vaccination, 1940-1960
3. Mosunmola Ogunmolaji, Royalty in the Ward: Princess Adenrele Ademola and Elite African Women inBritish Nursing Training, 1930s-1940s ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected] 
Moderators
MR

Miriam Rich

University of Texas Medical Branch
Speakers
RH

Rose Holz

Professor of Practice, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
MY

Molly Yeo

University of Virginia

DT

Dominique Tobbell

University of Virginia

MO

Mosunmola Ogunmolaji

University of Florida

Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

1:00pm EDT

F4. Transgressed Boundaries, Interconnected Histories: Gender, Medicine, and Sociotechnical Systems of Healthcare in Global East Asia
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
1. Tianyuan Huang, Who Treated Women Better?  The Material Culture of Disregard, the Transnational Hierarchy of Tradition, and Medical Pluralism in Tokugawa Japan ([email protected])
2. Soyoung Suh, Uncertainty as A Norm: Depo-Provera, Breast Cancer, and the Gendered Medical Culture in South Korea, 1960s-1970s ([email protected])
3. Jingya Guo, Phlegm or Amenorrhea? The Blood Myriad and Instability of Diagnostic Categories in Women’s Bodies in Seventeenth-Century China ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
HB

He Bian

Princeton University

Speakers
TH

Tianyuan Huang

Tohoku University

SS

Soyoung Suh

Associate Professor, Dartmouth College


JG

Jingya Guo

Cornell University

Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

1:00pm EDT

F5. Historian-Clinician Engagement
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
While their perspectives may differ, both clinicians and medical historians share a common interest in the history of health care. The premise, therefore, of this roundtable is that historians and clinicians have much to offer each other in both theory and practice. This is particularly true at a time when medical history is occupying an ever more precarious place in the medical school curriculum. Further, while dated stereotypes about Whiggism and presentism persist, the clinician population is changing as are its historical interests. The possibilities for new areas of collaboration are expanding.

Growing out of an ad hoc committee on clinician engagement, this roundtable will explore practical strategies for expanding historian-clinician engagement. This roundtable will facilitate discussion between clinicians and historians, and generate additional ideas that can be applied at the institutional and local level.
  • Shelley McKellar PhD will draw on her experience teaching medical students and residents, who are seeking venues and communities for avocational clinicians interested in the history of medicine
  • Mindy Schwartz MD will discuss the Clio Project and the development of an online community to support medical history
  • Justin Barr MD, PhD will provide insights into publishing history in medical journals from his perspective as both an author and the history editor for Annals of Surgery Open
  • Peter Kernahan MD, PhD will discuss historical initiatives at the American College of Surgeons 
  • Julie Lemmon MD will comment on historian-clinician interaction from the perspective of a clinician completing a master’s degree in the history of medicine 
  • David Korostyshevsky PhD will discuss his experience researching, writing, and producing a departmental history while a graduate student
Chair emails:
[email protected]
[email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • To understand historical activities in the clinician community
  • To recognize the mutual benefits of collaboration between historians and clinicians
  • To develop initiatives for integrating history into the medical curriculum

Moderators
WO

Walton O. Schalick, III

University of Wisconsin - Madison
Speakers
JB

Justin Barr

Ochsner Clinic

PK

Peter Kernahan

University of Minnesota

SM

Shelley McKellar

Western University

avatar for David Korostyshevsky

David Korostyshevsky

Faculty, Colorado State University
I am an interdisciplinary historian studying addiction, gender, and the family at the nexus of medicine and law. My research interests also include life insurance medicine and the formation of enduring disparities in modern healthcare systems. I am an Instructor in the Department... Read More →
avatar for Julie Lemmon

Julie Lemmon

Johns Hopkins University

MS

Mindy Schwartz

University of Chicago Medicine

Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

1:00pm EDT

F6. Recontextualize? Return? Navigating the Afterlives of Human Remains in Medical Collections
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Nineteenth- and twentieth-century anatomists and physicians at American medical schools and medical societies amassed collections of human remains, harvesting tissues from their living patients or exhuming graveyards, buying from dealers, or trading remains with interlocutors near and far. Anatomy collections—which often harbored examples of ‘healthy’ bodies—and pathology collections—which housed ‘diseased’ or ‘deformed’ ones—benefitted doctors in ways both pedagogic and reputational. Students consulted these collections to learn about the body; doctors burnished their bonafides by demonstrating diagnostic and surgical skills. Historically, physicians rarely considered the desires of any person whose body they added to a collection. Current stewards often think about them differently, and the American Association for Anatomy issued recommendations for these ‘legacy collections’ last year. In this roundtable, presenters from Johns Hopkins, Yale, and the College of Physicians of Philadelphia will discuss several case studies highlighting their work to re-interpret and/or return human remains in such collections. 

The panelists’ work engages questions central to these conversations: how can we track the provenance and life histories of specimens that have little identifying information? Should we? How might digital tools engage new stewards of these remains? What does it mean to anonymize or de-anonymize human remains? How might contemporary frameworks like informed consent and patient privacy help and hinder efforts to steward collections? When and how can we discover possible descendent communities? What processes might be required to inform these communities about ancestral remains? How might we reframe the history of physician-patient relationships by accounting for collecting practices? Each presenter will emphasize different considerations and approaches to recontextualizing, [un]displaying, or returning human remains. We will additionally invite attendees to briefly share their own experience so that we can all learn from each other. We will take notes and create a resource about projects in progress and tactics attendees are using.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Identify changes in medical collection practices and interpretations over time
  • Deepen understanding of current landscape of repatriation work or the recontextualization of collections
  • Develop a historically informed sensitivity to patients whose bodies physicians exhibited as specimens (including appreciation of class, gender, socio-economic status, ethnicity, cultural, spiritual orientations)

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.

Moderators
CT

Courtney Thompson

Mississippi State University

Speakers
AD

Anjali Dhanekula

Yale University

LG

Lisa Geiger

Mütter Museum

JH

Jessica Hester

Johns Hopkins University

SH

Sara Hollar

Yale University
ML

Megann Licskai

Yale University
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Roosevelt Room

3:45pm EDT

G1. How Medicine Decides What Counts as Evidence
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
1. Barron Lerner, Bad Attitudes: Thomas Holmes and the Connection of Emotion to Disease ([email protected])
2. Stephen Casper, Why We Can No Longer Diagnose What We Discovered: A Genealogy of Traumatic Encephalopathy Syndrome ([email protected])
3. Johanna Schoen, Pain and the Premature Infant ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]

This panel explores the changing nature of evidence in the history of medicine, emphasizing the social and cultural factors that have influenced scientific assessment. First, Stephen Casper explores traumatic brain injuries over time, noting how standardization of diagnosis supplanted clinical observations. While providing a uniform diagnosis, a term such as “Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy” may have little connection and meaning for individual patients.

Second, Barron Lerner revisits a forgotten episode in the history of psychosomatic medicine in which a post-World War II psychiatrist named Thomas Holmes developed an elaborate system tying specific emotional states to the development of various diseases. While evolving standards of clinical evidence eventually disproved most of Holmes’ connections, his concept of emotions—and their visual representations—was a patient-centered approach to understanding complicated illnesses.

Third, Johanna Schoen explores the evidence used by physicians to justify the withholding of anesthesia for infants—arguing that they felt no pain. It was not until the 1980s that parents became aware that their infants received no anesthesia/pain control, and it took another decade to change clinical practice.  

Moderators
JB

Jeffrey Baker

Duke University School of Medicine

Speakers
BL

Barron Lerner

New York University Langone Medical Center
SC

Stephen Casper

Clarkson University

avatar for Johanna Schoen

Johanna Schoen

Professor of History, Rutgers University
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

3:45pm EDT

G2. Carceral Sickness in the State of New York
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Scholars like Harriet Washington, Heather Ann Thompson, and Susan Reverby have illuminated the history of substandard healthcare provision in American prisons during the twentieth century. They have identified the many harms endured and resisted by generations of prisoners, their families, and broader communities, harms arising from factors like enduring racism, medical experimentation, malnutrition, overcrowding, inadequate service provision and oversight, and unmet mental health needs. Despite reports and inquiries spanning decades, from Rector’s 1929 survey of medical provision in American prisons to investigations surrounding the 1971 Attica uprising, the carceral system’s health problems have remained deeply entrenched and widespread, especially following the rise of mass incarceration in the 1970s.  

This roundtable discussion will draw connections and comparisons across one hundred years of prisoners’ health experiences in the state of New York, with a particular focus on infectious disease. The research team - three formerly incarcerated scholars and one university-affiliated historian - came together in 2024 to investigate questions of sickness, disability, race, and scientific racism using century-old prison records at the New York State Archives. 
Building from an archival exploration of syphilis treatment during the 1920s at Elmira Reformatory, the Institution of Defective Delinquents at Napanoch, and Sing Sing Prison, the discussion will expand to foreground more recently incarcerated individuals’ experiences facing infectious diseases like HIV, Hepatitis C, and COVID-19. Questions the speakers will address include:
  • How did changing testing and treatment standards for syphilis affect New York prisoners during the 1910s and 1920s?
  • To what extent were/are prisoners coerced into treatment and to what extent could/can they resist?
  • In what ways did/do certain diseases attract moral punishment within prison settings?
  • How might the inclusion of formerly incarcerated scholars in the research and writing process lead to a richer understanding of historical and present-day healthcare challenges within the carceral system?
Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Develop a historically informed understanding of sickness and health in the carceral system
  • Develop an understanding of the enduring nature of inadequate healthcare provision in American prisons
  • Learn about research co-production methodology

Moderators
avatar for Richard McKay

Richard McKay

University of Cambridge


Speakers
KK

Kevin Kareem Brooks

Hudson Link for Higher Education in Prison

avatar for Leon ”Struggle” Davis

Leon ”Struggle” Davis

Consultant, Researcher, Hudson Link for Highter Education in Prison
Leon Davis is a community-based researcher, public health student at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, and educator whose work examines incarceration through the lens of the history of medicine and carceral health. He is a lead researcher with the Carceral Sickness... Read More →
RQ

Reginald Qualls

Independent Scholar, Hudson Link for Higher Education in Prison
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

3:45pm EDT

G3. Cross Cultural Borders of Care
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
1. Rohini Dasgupta,The Other Pains: Cervical Cancer, Colonial Medicine, and Reproductive Subjectivity in 20th-Century India ([email protected])
2. Xiaoyun Zhao, Nursing Book Publishing and the Development of Modern Chinese Nursing during the Republic of China (1912–1949) ([email protected])
3. Yao Tang, Crossing Borders of Care: The Professionalization of Women in Nursing and China–U.S. Collaboration at Xiangya, 1909–1926 ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
avatar for Reynaldo Capucao

Reynaldo Capucao

Mellon Race, Place, and Equity Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Virginia-Main Campus
Speakers
RD

Rohini Dasgupta

University of Wisconsin-Madison

YT

Yao Tang

University of Virginia

XZ

Xiaoyun Zhao

University of Pittsburgh

Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

3:45pm EDT

G4. Examining the Past, Building the Future: The Barbara Bates Center for the History of Nursing at 40
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
In 1986, the Center for the Study of the History of Nursing at Penn Nursing received official recognition as a center by the University of Pennsylvania. Its inaugural leadership included visionary nursing leaders like Joan S. Lynaugh, Ellen D. Baer, and Lillian S. Brunner, and the historian of medicine Charles Rosenberg. From its earliest days, the Center articulated a multi-faceted, interdisciplinary mission that aimed to document, collect, and preserve the history of nursing and to produce new research in the history of nursing for the benefit of the nursing profession. But perhaps more than anything else, the Center has served as a crucial community-building hub that has historically brought together scholars and students from a wide variety of backgrounds. Nurses, historians, and physicians (and all the combinations therein) have found themselves drawn into the Bates Center’s orbit over the years. Through its expansive archival collections as well as its outreach in education, research, publication, funding, and programming, the Center has arguably had an outsized impact on shaping the field of the history of nursing given its small size. Its reach has spread around the world, its impact profoundly shaping not only the history of nursing, but also the history of medicine and the field of nursing itself. This roundtable brings together six individuals who have helped shape the Bates Center’s story over the past four decades to critically discuss the Center’s dual role as a bridge between nursing and history, and between the history of nursing and the history of medicine. Please join us as we recognize the Bates Center’s 40th anniversary with a critical and lively discussion of the Center’s past impact, its struggles, its successes, and how we can build on this rich and complicated past to envision its future.

Learning Outcomes
  • Develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of nursing and medicine.
  • Identify successes and failures in the history of nursing and medical professionalism.
  • Recognize the dynamic interrelationship between nursing, medicine and society through history

Moderators
MB

Margo Brooks Carthon

The Barbara Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing

Speakers
MG

Mary Gibson

Associate Professor Emerita, University of Virginia
avatar for Andre Rosario

Andre Rosario

Assistant Professor, Thomas Jefferson University
JM

Jessica Martucci

The Barbara Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing

HA

Hafeeza Anchrum

University of Pennsylvania

Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

3:45pm EDT

G5. Thinking with Southeast Asia
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
This roundtable brings together a group of scholars to discuss the possibilities for future directions in the history of medicine from the vantage of Southeast Asia. As a place of tremendous cultural and ecological diversity, shaped by the collision of different colonizing and decolonizing projects, Southeast Asia focuses our attention on those cross-cultural circulations of knowledge and transnational networks of expertise that shaped the everyday experiences of medicine, health and caregiving across the region and beyond. Indeed, we argue that this region, which remains "peripheral" to scholarship on the history of medicine, was never just "out there" but was instead a constitutive feature of the global development of medicine and public health. The four panelists will offer vignettes from their current projects. Anh Le (Assistant Professor, Muhlenberg College) will speak about how connections across diasporic Chinese communities in Southeast Asia reshaped the meaning and practice of traditional Chinese medicine in colonial Vietnam. Thuy Linh Nguyen (Associate Professor, Mount Saint Mary College) will discuss the health impacts of the colonial mining industry amidst the intensification of colonial capitalism and ecological degradation in Vietnam’s northern borderlands with China. Claire Edington (Associate Professor, University of California - San Diego) will discuss how we might use archival sources to recover the experiences of drug users and their families in Vietnam across the twentieth century. Michitake Aso (University at Albany - SUNY) will talk about the public health response to Agent Orange during and after the Vietnam War as a way to reframe our understanding of the relationship of medical science and postwar politics. This discussion will showcase how the history of medicine in Southeast Asia offers valuable conceptual frames for widening our field of vision, both within HOM and Southeast Asian Studies. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • To deepen understanding of the importance of Southeast Asia to the global history of medicine and public health
  • To think with Southeast Asia as a generative site for exploring new themes and methodologies in the history of medicine
  • To reflect more generally on the relationship between area studies and the history of medicine, and to chart out future steps for collaboration across fields.

Moderators
CE

Claire Edington

University of California, San Diego

Speakers
MA

Michitake Aso

University at Albany, SUNY

AL

Anh Le

Muhlenberg College

TL

Thuy Linh Nguyen

Mount Saint Mary College

Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

3:45pm EDT

G6. Historians' Role in Researching and Writing Amicus Briefs
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
This workshop will bring together AAHM members who have recently written amicus briefs for the U.S. Supreme Court and appeals courts, among them Chiles v. Salazar (2025), Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (2022), and GenBioPro v. Raynes et. al. (2025). Topics covered will be: the reasons for sharing our historical knowledge in this way, especially at this point in time; the differences between academic history writing and this kind of legal writing; and the practical challenges of working with lawyers and law firms on a tight schedule. As part of our preparation, we plan on surveying AAHM members to collect information on how many have worked on amicus briefs in the past five years. Also, we will discuss the feasibility of creating a handbook of information—what we wish someone had told us at the start—to share with other AAHM members who decide to do this kind of work. We will also discuss the feasibility of creating and publicizing a list of AAHM members interested in writing amicus briefs.

Chair email: [email protected]

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.

Learning Outcomes
  • Understand why historians of medicine are asked to write amicus briefs
  • Understand how amicus briefs are written and how this writing differs from other kinds of academic historical writing
  • Gain insight into how historians collaborate with lawyers
  • Evaluate types of resources that would help future historians write amicus briefs.

Moderators
RK

Rebecca Kluchin

California State University-Sacremento

Speakers
avatar for Lara Freidenfelds

Lara Freidenfelds

Independent Scholar
avatar for Susan Lawrence

Susan Lawrence

Professor, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Currently at work with Sue Lederer on the history of American cadavers, unclaimed bodies and the rise of body donation, tentatively titled American Cadavers: 1780-1980.  Sue and I published an article in Medical Humanities (2023), "Medical specimens and the erasure of racial v... Read More →
NT

Nancy Tomes

Professor of History, Stony Brook University
JG

Joseph Gabriel

Florida State University
LR

Leslie Reagan

Professor, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Roosevelt Room
 
Sunday, June 7
 

8:30am EDT

H1. Therapeutic Jurisprudence
Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
1. David Korostyshevsky, Locked in a Mad House: Guardianship, Asylums, and the Medical Incarceration of Habitual Drunkards in the Gilded Age ([email protected])
2. Peper Rivers, “‘Artificial Motivation’: The American Experiment with Civil Commitment for People Who Use Drugs (1961-1971)” ([email protected])
3. Elizabeth Nelson ([email protected]) and Jarrod Wall ([email protected]), Getting into the DSM: Diagnostic Recognition of Trauma among Vietnam Vets and the Formerly Incarcerated

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
MR

Michael Rembis

Professor, Department of History Director, Center for Disability Studies Co-PI Mellon Communities of Care, University at Buffalo

Speakers
avatar for David Korostyshevsky

David Korostyshevsky

Faculty, Colorado State University
I am an interdisciplinary historian studying addiction, gender, and the family at the nexus of medicine and law. My research interests also include life insurance medicine and the formation of enduring disparities in modern healthcare systems. I am an Instructor in the Department... Read More →
PR

Peper Rivers

Indiana University

EN

Elizabeth Nelson

Indiana University

JW

Jarrod Wall

Tulane University

Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

8:30am EDT

H2. After the Single Use: Toxicity and Risk in Medical Technologies
Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
1. Eloïse Richard, Toxic Asepsis: Chemical Sterilization and the Rise of Disposable Medical Devices in the 20th Century ([email protected])
2. Amanda Mahoney, “A non-expendable disposable,”: Nurses, Central Supply, and the Problem of Tubing in U.S. Hospitals, 1915-1965 ([email protected])
3. Sloane Wesloh, Personal health devices, chronic disease, and the consumerization of risk ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
JG

Joseph Gabriel

Florida State University
Speakers
ER

Eloïse Richard

University of Geneva

AM

Amanda Mahoney

Case Western Reserve University

avatar for Sloane Wesloh

Sloane Wesloh

PhD candidate, History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh

Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

8:30am EDT

H3. Disease, Disability, and Dissection
Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
1. Walton Schalick, The Twin Paradox: A Study of Health, Disease, and Disability in theTwelfth-century De gemellis ([email protected])
2. Brian Long, Learned Medicine among the Saints: Quantifying Medical Miracles in the Long Twelfth Century ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
avatar for Wendy J Turner

Wendy J Turner

Professor of History, Augusta University
I work on disability history through the lens of law. This includes mental health, intellectual disabilities, medicine, the brain, injury, and impairment. 
Speakers
WO

Walton O. Schalick, III

University of Wisconsin - Madison
BL

Brian Long

Independent Scholar

Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

8:30am EDT

H4. Why the History of Medicine Needs Trans and Intersex Studies
Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
This roundtable brings together scholars working at the intersection of trans studies, intersex studies, and the history of medicine. The roundtable argues that the history of medicine stands to benefit from a greater engagement with some of the central questions of trans and intersex studies, namely: the historical and social contingency of concepts like sex, gender, and identity; the role of medicine in coercive and carceral treatment of trans and intersex people; and the positioning of trans and intersex people as objects rather than subjects of medical, social, and cultural knowledges.


Critical trans and intersex studies has produced a long-standing body of scholarship reckoning with the nature and social consequences of medicalized concepts like sex, gender, and identity. How can engagement with critical trans and intersex studies enrich the understanding of these concepts held by both scholars and practitioners? What would it mean for both medical education and the history of medicine to center trans and intersex people as producers of knowledge on these categories, rather than objects of clinical investigation?


Trans and intersex people in the U.S. have been subject to remarkably high levels of psychiatric incarceration, forced surgical and medical interventions, and medically justified criminal detention. As such, trans and intersex studies has long engaged with medicine as a site of coercive and carceral power. The history of medicine, on the other hand, has been slower to turn to trans and intersex studies as a source of knowledge and scholarship on the coercive and carceral potential of medicine. What can medicine learn about itself by engaging more proactively with trans and intersex studies? What would it mean for medical education to include the history of medicine’s collaboration with carceral and state power to vis a vis trans and intersex people?

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Develop an historically informed sensitivity to the diversity of patients (including appreciation of class, gender, socio-economic status, ethnicity, cultural, spiritual orientations)
  • Recognize the dynamic interrelationship between medicine and society through history
  • Develop the capacity for critical thinking about the nature, ends and limits of medicine

Moderators
CC

Cam Cannon

Assistant Professor, American Studies, George Washington University


Speakers
AG

Adrien Gau

University of Pennsylvania
ER

Elizabeth Reis

Macauley Honors College, City University of New York

AJ

Andrea J. Pitts

University at Buffalo

avatar for Matthew Marciello

Matthew Marciello

PhD Candidate, American Studies, George Washington University
My dissertation project titled “Intersex Trouble: The Intersex Society of North America, John Money, and Intersectional Problems in the History of Intersex Activism and Sexology” is a cultural, intellectual, and institutional history of the Intersex Society of North America (ISNA... Read More →
Sunday June 7, 2026 8:30am - 10:00am EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:30am EDT

I1. Rethinking Epidemic Moments
Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
1. Stephen Pemberton, A Case of Medical Tragedy and ‘Doctor Guilt’ ([email protected])
2. Ashley Brown, Situating Kahnawà:ke in the 1885 Montreal Smallpox Epidemic ([email protected])
3. Knowledge G. Moyo, Blood, HIV/AIDS, and the Hematological Diagnosis of a Diseased Nation, c 1985- 2000 ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
avatar for Emily Webster

Emily Webster

Assistant Professor in the History and Philosophy of Health and Medicine, University of Durham

Speakers
SP

Stephen Pemberton

New Jersey Institute of Technology

AB

Ashley Brown

McGill University
KG

Knowledge G. Moyo

PhD Candidate, University of Texas At Austin

Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Grand Ballroom E Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:30am EDT

I2. Expertise Across Medical Boundaries
Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
1. Lucas Richert, "The Physician Is Boss?”: Scope Creep, Status Strain, and the Pharmacist–Physician Divide in American Healthcare ([email protected])
2. Libby O'Neil, Wired Up: Biofeedback Research between Medicine and Counterculture in the 1970s ([email protected])
3. Matthew Soleiman, “Ten Steps from Patient to Person”: Self-Help Activism and the Emergence of the American Chronic Pain Association ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
JS

Jonathan Sadowsky

Case Western Reserve University
Speakers
LR

Lucas Richert

University of Wisconsin-Madison

LO

Libby O'Neil

Mississippi State University

MS

Matthew Soleiman

University of California, San Diego

Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Grand Ballroom F Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:30am EDT

I3. Who's Afraid of ChatGPT?
Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
The accelerating integration of artificial intelligence into clinical medicine, education, and other contexts raises concerns about the risks of this technology and who should be held responsible when AI causes preventable harm. Efforts to automate labor and decision-making have a complex history, connecting tests, forms, timers, meters, machines, and algorithms. This roundtable will discuss how automation technologies produce novel and sometimes unexpected risks, tend to reinforce existing social hierarchies, and disrupt lines of accountability for undesirable outcomes ranging from injuries to the misallocation of scarce resources. Based on these problems and the rhetoric around automation since the early-1900s, we will consider the extent to which the real and perceived dangers of AI are “new” or continuations of the longer-term trend of automation.


This roundtable consists of four historians and anthropologists of medicine and technology who have studied the practical applications and cultural meanings of automation from the twentieth century to the present. Andrew Lea, author of the book Digitizing Diagnosis (2023), has mapped the early history of computer-assisted diagnosis and is working on the history of software errors involving radiation therapy and electronic blood banks. Zeynel Gül studies the medical and legal uncertainty around the diagnosis and treatment of silicosis in present-day Turkey, documenting how depersonalized technologies and procedures invalidate the claims of sick workers. Tina Wei has investigated the history of workplace fatigue with particular attention to time-motion studies and the paper tools used to screen and to structure the labor force. Alex Parry works on home accidents and consumer product safety, showing how engineering fail-safes can simultaneously protect appliance users and lead some of these users to take unnecessary risks.


Altogether, this roundtable will help its participants reflect on the dynamic place of automation in the history of medicine and the continued push to make AI central to our work as educators, researchers, and clinicians.

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Describe the historical continuities and discontinuities between artificial intelligence and earlier automation technologies, especially their effects on health and safety.
  • Explain how automation technologies can contribute to undesirable outcomes including injuries and the misallocation of medical resources.
  • Apply insights from history and medical anthropology to evaluate the role of automation technologies in present-day healthcare systems and academic institutions.


Moderators
SC

Stephen Casper

Clarkson University

Speakers
AP

Alexander Parry

University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry

AL

Andrew Lea

University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry

JT

Jiemin Tina Wei

Florida International University

ZG

Zeynel Gül

University of Illinois Chicago

Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Grand Ballroom G Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

10:30am EDT

I4. Histories and Ethics of Medical Photography
Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
1. Brynne McBryde, Photographic Manipulation and the Shaping of the Medical Record ([email protected])
2. Christine Slobogin, Feminized Anonymity: Gender and Privacy in Patient Photographs ([email protected])
3. Kathleen Pierce, Photographing the Animal Research Subject ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected] 


Moderators
SL

Susan Lederer

Professor, University of Wisconsin
Speakers
BM

Brynne McBryde

University of Maryland

CS

Christine Slobogin

University of Rochester
KP

Kathleen Pierce

Smith College

Sunday June 7, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level
 
2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Register to attend
Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link

Filter sessions
Apply filters to sessions.