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2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Venue: Grand Ballroom G clear filter
Friday, June 5
 

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

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

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

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
 
Saturday, June 6
 

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

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

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
 
Sunday, June 7
 

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

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
 
2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
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