Thursday, December 3, 2009

Changing the Face of Medicine


The exhibit, Changing the Face of Medicine, arrived the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. It's hard to believe that Marion Public Library applied to host it five long years ago. Thanks to Roger, head of properties, and Paul, network manager, the panels were erected and the computer kiosks were up and running the next day.

This exhibit examines how women and other minorities have struggled to become physicians. As you walk around the panels, you will see the stories of women such as Elizabeth Blackwell who worked and studied, sometimes against overwhelming conditions, to become healers.

Medicine is so broad a field, so closely interwoven with general interests, dealing as it does with all ages, sexes and classes, and yet of so personal a character in its individual appreciations, that it must be regarded as one of those great departments of work in which the cooperation of men and women is needed to fulfill all its requirements.
--Elizabeth Blackwell

Contrary to popular opinion, Elizabeth Blackwell wasn't born in America but in Britain. Her family immigrated to the US when she was still a child. She applied to many medical schools in the late 1840s but was rejected by all but one. The Geneva Medical College in Geneva, NY presented her application to the student body and allowed them to vote on her admission. Thinking that it was a prank, they voted to admit her. The school and townspeople were horrified upon her arrival. In the beginning she was a outcast among her fellow students as well as the community. As her intelligence and persistence became apparent, she made friends among the students. In January 1849 Blackwell won the triple crown for women in medicine:
  • 1st in her class,
  • 1st woman in the US to graduate from medical school,
  • and the 1st woman in modern times to be a physician.
You can learn much more about America's women physicians @ the Marion Public Library from now until February 12 through Changing the Face of Medicine


Thursday, July 9, 2009

About the Header Images

Below are descriptions of and credits for the images used in our header. Images are listed in order from left to right.

  1. S. Josephine Baker, M.D., Dr. P.H., was a prominent public health physician during the first half of the 20th century.
    Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZ62-058326, ca. 1920
  2. Nina Starr Braunwald, M.D., M.S., shown in this 1960 photo, was one of the first women to train as a general surgeon at New York's Bellevue Hospital. A pioneer in the field of heart surgery, she led the team that was the first to implant a prosthetic heart valve, which she also designed.Eugene Braunwald, M.D.
  3. Dr. Susan Briggs (second from right) with a U.S. burn team near Ufa, Russia, June, 1989. Dr. Briggs founded the International Medical Surgical Response Team in 2000 to respond to natural and manmade disasters.Susan M. Briggs, M.D., M.P.H.
  4. Dr. May Edward Chinn examining a young patient, 1930. Dr. Chinn graduated from medical school in 1926 and practiced medicine in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City for 50 years.George B. Davis, Ph.D.
  5. Dr. Sharon M. Malotte was the first Native American from Nevada to become a physician.Sharon M. Malotte, M.D., photograph by d'Joyce Bismarck, 1986
  6. Dr. Linda Shortliffe earned board certification in urology in 1983, when there were only 15 women urologists in the U.S. Now there are more than two hundred.Linda M. Dairiki Shortliffe, M.D., 2000