We've found maps, or portions thereof, on the backs of some of Frank Mack's "Skeeter" malaria cartoons I've been scanning. Cool stuff.
An unofficial blog about the National Museum of Health and Medicine (nee the Army Medical Museum) in Silver Spring, MD. Visit for news about the museum, new projects, musing on the history of medicine and neat pictures.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Yester-Day in the Life of an Archivist
Yesterday due to heavy rains, we had some minor flooding in the Museum. The Archives is in the "new" (1971) wing, which attaches to the old (1955) building, and water can get between the walls so we had some bubbling up through about 5 square feet of rug. Other areas in the Museum saw some slight leaks too. Let's hope the rain lightens up for the rest of the week.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
AFIP's Armed Forces Medical Examiner featured in NY Times
Here's a really good article about some of our colleagues (at least for 2 more years until BRAC goes through) - "Autopsies of War Dead Reveal Ways to Save Others," By DENISE GRADY, New York Times May 26, 2009. I hadn't heard about the collapsed lung problem and solution, but isn't that great how Dr. Harcke spotted that?
And this bit is lovely - "“He was one of the most compassionate people throughout this whole process that I dealt with from the Department of Defense,” Mrs. Sweet said of Captain Mallak." I don't really know Craig Mallak all that well as OAFME's off in Rockville, MD but it's nice to read something that positive about someone.
And this bit is lovely - "“He was one of the most compassionate people throughout this whole process that I dealt with from the Department of Defense,” Mrs. Sweet said of Captain Mallak." I don't really know Craig Mallak all that well as OAFME's off in Rockville, MD but it's nice to read something that positive about someone.
Malaria Moe
Warren Bernard gave us a nice donation last week of some WW2 malaria education cartoons done by Frank Mack, and a further "donation" of more of the same that we can scan for our collection. We had some of the "Malaria Moe" cartoons and some of these calendar pages, but ours were from microfilm and are black and white. Warren gave us the color versions and even 65 years on, they're fabulous.
Labels:
calendar,
cartoons,
Frank Mack,
malaria,
Malaria Moe,
World War 2,
WW2
Monday, May 25, 2009
Hospitals using Web2.0 to advertise
Today's NY Times has a fascinating article on this -
Webcast Your Brain Surgery? Hospitals See Marketing Tool
By PAM BELLUCK
Published: May 25, 2009
Hospitals are using Twitter from operating rooms, showing surgery on YouTube and having patients blog about their procedures, but ethics and privacy questions linger.
Webcast Your Brain Surgery? Hospitals See Marketing Tool
By PAM BELLUCK
Published: May 25, 2009
Hospitals are using Twitter from operating rooms, showing surgery on YouTube and having patients blog about their procedures, but ethics and privacy questions linger.
Friday, May 22, 2009
Yesterday was the Museum's 147th birthday
The Army Medical Museum was founded, on paper at least on May 21, 1862.
Yeah, we didn't notice either.
Yeah, we didn't notice either.
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Today was a positively gorgeous day in these parts, which called for a little road trip to Richmond. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is closing next month for a year for a massive remodel and expansion (sigh with envy) and they have just about four galleries open.
Here's what I found in one of them:
Scene from the Epidemic of Yellow Fever in Cadiz,
Théodore Géricault,
ca. 1819
Here's what I found in one of them:
Scene from the Epidemic of Yellow Fever in Cadiz,
Théodore Géricault,
ca. 1819
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Avian autopsy, or, a Ready-Made Meal
I found this tasty thing on the NLM website. The caption says something along the line of "Do you want to have dinner with us, Mother Piton?"
Sunday, May 17, 2009
More on the Red Cross and Mutilés
I came across a reference that's hosted on the WWW Virtual Library website. (Now there's a website that will cost you hours. What a great reference tool.) It's called A Statement of Finances and Accomplishments for the period July 1, 1917 to February 28, 1919, by the American Red Cross, Washington, DC, October 1919. It contains this paragraph:
The relief of French mutilés included the operation of a school farm, the manufacture of portrait masks and artificial limbs, the operation of an educational and publicity service, and assistance to French institutions offering commercial and industrial courses to mutilés. It is estimated that 6s,000 [?] of the 600,000 crippled French soldiers were reached by the Red Cross.
It has a table that shows what kind of services were provided:
I'm surprised that only 94 men received "portrait masks." I would have expected a higher number.
The relief of French mutilés included the operation of a school farm, the manufacture of portrait masks and artificial limbs, the operation of an educational and publicity service, and assistance to French institutions offering commercial and industrial courses to mutilés. It is estimated that 6s,000 [?] of the 600,000 crippled French soldiers were reached by the Red Cross.
It has a table that shows what kind of services were provided:
I'm surprised that only 94 men received "portrait masks." I would have expected a higher number.
Friday, May 15, 2009
Red Cross Work on Mutilés
Yesterday I gave a short presentation to an Elderhostel group visiting the museum (and let me just interject here how refreshing it was to speak to my peers, age-wise, as opposed to all the kids on staff) and as part of the presentation showed a 4-minute film called Red Cross Work on Mutilés, Paris, 1918. We recently had it transferred from Beta to a DVD and, although I've watched it over and over, I'm still mesmerized by it.
Today I was trolling the internet for more information on the Red Cross and mutilés (maimed) and found a title on Google books, American Red Cross Work among the French People, by Fisher Ames (1921) that had a photograph in it just like the background in the film.
And which is very similar to an exhibit we have:
Today I was trolling the internet for more information on the Red Cross and mutilés (maimed) and found a title on Google books, American Red Cross Work among the French People, by Fisher Ames (1921) that had a photograph in it just like the background in the film.
And which is very similar to an exhibit we have:
Labels:
facial wounds,
prosthetics,
Red Cross,
World War 1
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
New Deal Art Registry
The Jack McMillen painting I wrote about a couple of weeks ago, which showed psychiatric patients at Forest Glen, Maryland, has been added to the New Deal Art Registry.
Labels:
Forest Glen,
Jack McMillen,
New Deal Art Registry,
paintings
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Forensics articles in today's NY Times' Science section
There's five or six articles in the Science section for May 12th.
Vorwald Collection
I've been working on updating the Vorwald Collection, a 250+ box set of documents, studies, and patient files related to asbestosis and silicosis. Arthur Vorwald was a doctor who devoted his career, first at the Saranac Laboratories in New York, and then at Wayne State University (my alma mater, but a little before my time) in Detroit, to showing the cause of these diseases. I recently came across a couple dozen photographs that show working conditions in quarries and factories, both with and without dust control mechanisms in place. They will eventually go up on Flickr, but here's one in advance. Is it any wonder these guys were dying?
Leyner Bar Operator Working Without Dust Control
Leyner Bar Operator Working Without Dust Control
Labels:
asbestosis,
industrial health,
silicosis,
Vorwald Collection
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Exhibit Development FlyThru David Macaulay Exhibit
Exhibit Development flythru of the Macaulay Show
by Navjeet Singh Chhina
photoshop/cinema 4-d /vectorworks
Exhibit is "David Macaulay presents; The way we work" and
exhibits 55 of his drawings. At the museum until Sept 09.
Fun Films
Found a neat film in the Developmental Anatomy Center. It is supposed to be one of the first films showing cleavage occuring in a rabbit egg. Very cool. Going to scan it into digital format and hopefully post it.
Light 'em up
I was checking on some information in the Maxillofacial Surgery volume of The Medical Department of the US Army in the World War today (does that make me sound smart!?) and came across this passage on patients who had splints in their mouths for various fractures:
"Many of the soldiers with their mouths splinted were unable to smoke. This was overcome by placing a glass of water or cup of coffee or chocolate where they could reach it, when, after wetting their lips with their fingers which had been immersed in the liquid, they were able to smoke as long as the moisture remained. This gave them a great deal of comfort. It was possible, also, in cases in which the lower jaw was fixed or missing, for the patient to hold one nostril closed and then, by moistening the other nostril and putting a cigarette in it, to inhale through it, thus smoking quite readily."
I wish I had a picture of that.
"Many of the soldiers with their mouths splinted were unable to smoke. This was overcome by placing a glass of water or cup of coffee or chocolate where they could reach it, when, after wetting their lips with their fingers which had been immersed in the liquid, they were able to smoke as long as the moisture remained. This gave them a great deal of comfort. It was possible, also, in cases in which the lower jaw was fixed or missing, for the patient to hold one nostril closed and then, by moistening the other nostril and putting a cigarette in it, to inhale through it, thus smoking quite readily."
I wish I had a picture of that.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
May 6: A Conversation on Nursing at Walter Reed
A Conversation on Nursing at Walter Reed
Second in NMHM’s Walter Reed Centennial Year Lecture Series
When: Wednesday, May 6, 2009, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Where: Russell Auditorium, National Museum of Health and Medicine
What: Kick off National Nurses Week with "A Conversation on Nursing at Walter Reed." An informal discussion, featuring the history of nursing at Walter Reed, perspectives on current practices, and thoughts on the future of the Army Nurse Corps, will commemorate 100 years of nursing at Walter Reed.
Presenters: Debbie Cox, former Army Nurse Corps Historian; CPT Jennifer Easley, Medical/Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, WRAMC; LTC Patrick Ahearne, Staff Officer, Office of the Army Nurse Corps, Office of the Army Surgeon General
Cost: Free
Info: (202)782-2200 or nmhminfo@afip.osd.mil
www.nmhm.washingtondc.museum
Second in NMHM’s Walter Reed Centennial Year Lecture Series
When: Wednesday, May 6, 2009, 12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Where: Russell Auditorium, National Museum of Health and Medicine
What: Kick off National Nurses Week with "A Conversation on Nursing at Walter Reed." An informal discussion, featuring the history of nursing at Walter Reed, perspectives on current practices, and thoughts on the future of the Army Nurse Corps, will commemorate 100 years of nursing at Walter Reed.
Presenters: Debbie Cox, former Army Nurse Corps Historian; CPT Jennifer Easley, Medical/Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, WRAMC; LTC Patrick Ahearne, Staff Officer, Office of the Army Nurse Corps, Office of the Army Surgeon General
Cost: Free
Info: (202)782-2200 or nmhminfo@afip.osd.mil
www.nmhm.washingtondc.museum
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
An amazing story
Just saw this on my homepage. The woman who was the first US face transplant patient had a news conference. Brave, brave woman.
Jack McMillen painting
This 1944 painting by Jack McMillen was commissioned by the U.S. government for Walter Reed Army Medical Center as part of the Works Projects Administration (WPA) artists' program of World War II. It illustrates the historical function of the Forest Glen annex of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center as a holding and rehabilitation unit for medical patients, including psychiatric patients, during World War II.
This is a role the Forest Glen annex also played in subsequent wars. Psychiatric patients were identified, and to an extent stigmatized, by wearing maroon hospital clothing. For many years this painting was on display at the Forest Glen annex in Silver Spring, Maryland.
(from a publication by the Borden Institute)
The painting is egg tempera on canvas and measures 7 by 10.5 feet. It now is on display at the museum.
I also found a website while searching for whatever I could find on the artist. It's the New Deal Art Registry, a fun site to browse.
This is a role the Forest Glen annex also played in subsequent wars. Psychiatric patients were identified, and to an extent stigmatized, by wearing maroon hospital clothing. For many years this painting was on display at the Forest Glen annex in Silver Spring, Maryland.
(from a publication by the Borden Institute)
The painting is egg tempera on canvas and measures 7 by 10.5 feet. It now is on display at the museum.
I also found a website while searching for whatever I could find on the artist. It's the New Deal Art Registry, a fun site to browse.
Labels:
Forest Glen,
Jack McMillen,
paintings,
psychiatry
Monday, May 4, 2009
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)