"Nerves Need Nourishment": Advertising Phospho-Energon Pills in Early Twentieth-Century Sweden [0.03%]
" nerves need nourishment":瑞典20世纪初的磷精力丸广告分析
Lauren Alex OHagan,Leif Runefelt
Lauren Alex OHagan
This paper offers the first case study of Phospho-Energon - an early twentieth-century Swedish patent medicine believed to cure nervousness. Using a large dataset of newspaper advertisements, it explores how the product was presented throug...
Prescribing Information: Elizabeth B. Connell, the Pill, and the (Woman) Patient's Peace of Mind [0.03%]
避孕药的处方信息:Elizabeth B. Connell、The Pill以及女性患者的安心感
Jiemin Tina Wei
Jiemin Tina Wei
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, commercialized reproductive technologies experienced a reputational crisis as news about the hormonal birth control pill's possible side effects reportedly caused 18-30% of women to stop taking it. While seco...
Working Vacations and Adventure: American Women Physician Volunteers to the Labrador Mission of Wilfred Grenfell Before 1914 [0.03%]
1914年以前美国女医师志愿者在威弗里德·格林菲尔德拉布拉多传教 mission工作的经历与冒险:职业假期的早期形态
Jennifer J Connor
Jennifer J Connor
Many accounts, autobiographical and scholarly, emphasize how volunteers portrayed their work in the mission established for fishers by British physician Wilfred Grenfell in Newfoundland and Labrador: as escapist adventure. Scholars have not...
Safe Sex and the Debate over Condoms on Campus in the 1980s: Sperm Busters at Harvard and Protection Connection at the University of Texas at Austin [0.03%]
上世纪八十年代美国高校安全套议题之争——以哈佛大学和得克萨斯大学奥斯汀分校为例
Abena Dove Osseo-Asare
Abena Dove Osseo-Asare
During the 1980s, college students in the United States helped to destigmatize the distribution and use of condoms. They shifted their aims from preventing unwanted pregnancy to stopping the spread of sexually transmitted infections includi...
Medicalizing the Body and the Locale: Kala Azar and Disease Thinking in Assam, 1824-1900 [0.03%]
医学化身体与地域:1824-1900年阿萨姆地方内脏利什曼病的诊疗思维
Bikash Sarma
Bikash Sarma
The article examines two seemingly unconnected occurrences at the nineteenth-century north east frontier of British India. The first is the production of a pathological space via moral, social, and cultural codes enacted by medical topograp...
Which Stranger's Disease? Immigration, Immunization, and the Whitening of Cuba in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions [0.03%]
哪一种陌生人的疾病?移民、免疫与大西洋革命时代的“白化”古巴
Farren Yero
Farren Yero
In 1804, Cuban physician Tomás Romay tried and failed to create the first yellow fever vaccine. The article analyzes his experimental efforts, foregrounding the enslaved and enlisted subjects at the center of this early vaccine trial. Thou...
The Influential Influenza: The "Russian Catarrh" Pandemic of 1781-1782 [0.03%]
1781-1782年"俄罗斯卡塔拉"流感大流行
Matthew P Romaniello
Matthew P Romaniello
The influenza pandemic of 1781-1782 was remarkably well-documented, with investigations and treatment records produced in Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Russia. Everyone agreed that outbreak began in St. Petersburg in December 1781 an...
Contagious Vibrations: Sympathetic Resonance as a Model for Disease Transmission in the Writings of Ficino, Fracastoro, and Cardano [0.03%]
共鸣振动:继芬奇、弗拉卡斯托罗和卡丹作品中关于疾病传播的模型中的共振理论
Remi Chiu
Remi Chiu
Contagious diseases were among the most vexing problems in ancient theories of health, which could not easily account for how a corruption of one person's humors could cause a similar corruption in another's. One useful explanatory concept ...
From Photography to Radiology: How Physicians Leveraged Early Hospital X-ray Machines to Supplant Photographers [0.03%]
从摄影到放射学:医师如何利用早期医院X光机取代摄影师
Joseph Bishop
Joseph Bishop
At the end of the nineteenth century, the advent of x-ray machines fueled American medicine's reliance on technology, transforming hospitals and the medical profession. X-ray manufacturers pursued the nascent hospital market as competition ...
A Disputed Hegemony: Negotiating Neurosurgical Patient Care in the Netherlands, 1930-1952 [0.03%]
备受争议的主导地位:荷兰神经外科患者护理的发展(1930-1952年)
Bart Lutters
Bart Lutters
The emergence of the neurosurgical patient as a novel clinical entity in the Netherlands was marked by a lingering conflict between neurologists and neurosurgeons, in which both types of specialists sought to assume the clinical and institu...