United States
3,230 entries published in United States. 270 publication places.
2000 CE
#11445
The biographical dictionary of women in science: Pioneering lives from ancient times to the mid-20th century.
2000 CE
#11659
Cleavage: Technology, controversy and the ironies of the man-made breast.
2000 CE
#11893
Women's healthcare in the Medieval West: Texts and contexts.
The Appendix is Medieval gynecological texts: A handlist. This is "a list of all gynecological texts currently known to me from western Europe written between the 4th and 15th centuries. It includes gynecological exce…
2000 CE
#12212
Shaping biology: The National Science Foundation and American biological research, 1945-1975.
"Scientists by training, NSF biologists hoped in the 1950s that the new agency would become the federal government's chief patron for basic research in biology, the only agency to fund the entire range of biology&mdas…
2000 CE–2015 CE
#12260
Ladies in the laboratory. 4 vols. 1: American and British women in science, 1800-1900: A survey of their contributions to research. 2: West European women in science, 1800-1900: A survey of their contributions (2004). 3: South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian women in science: Nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (2010). 4: Imperial Russia's women in science, 1800-1900: A survey of their contributions to research (2015).
2000 CE
#12328
Tuskegee's truths: Rethinking the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. Edited by Susan M. Reverby.
2000 CE
#12373
Devices and desires: Gender, technology, and American nursing.
"Nursing and technology have been inexorably linked since the beginnings of trained nursing in the United States in the late nineteenth century. Whether or not they thought of the devices they used as technology, nurs…
2000 CE
#12528
Encyclopedia of medicine in the Bible and the Talmud.
An extension and expansion of Preuss, Biblisch-talmudische Medizin (1911, 1923). See No. 6498.
2000 CE
#13223
A new and untried course: Woman's Medical College and Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1850-1998.
2000 CE
#13318
The benefits of medical research and the role of the NIH.
According to Senator Mack's report, the economic costs of illness in the U.S. were approximately $3 trillion annually, representing 31% of the nation’s GDP. This included “direct” costs of public and…
2000 CE
#13883
NDA II. The story of America's second National Dental Association.
2001 CE
#6903
Tarnished Idol: William Thomas Green Morton and the introduction of surgical anesthesia. A chronicle of the ether controversy
The most comprehensive biography of Morton, and the most comprehensive account of the ether controversy between Morton and Charles Thomas Jackson.
2001 CE
#7101
A history of blood coagulation.
2001 CE
#7191
Machines in our hearts: The cardiac pacemaker, the implantable defibrillator, and American health care.
2001 CE–2008 CE
#7524
An annotated catalogue of the Edward C. Atwater collection of American popular medicine and health reform. 3 vols.
2001 CE
#7635
Stuffed animals and pickled heads: The culture and evolution of natural history museums.
2001 CE
#7776
Bodies politic: Disease, death and doctors in Britain, 1650-1900.
Social history emphasizing the visual depiction of disease, death and doctors.
2001 CE
#8124
Medical ethics in the ancient world.
2001 CE
#8167
The Wikipedia.
https://www.icrc.org/en/who-we-are/history When I posted this in December 2016 there were over 5,300,000 entries just in the English language Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page Though, of course, the q…
2001 CE
#8276
Medicine and the German Jews: A history.
2001 CE
#8357
Anglo-Saxon remedies, charms, and prayers from British Library MS Harley 585: The ‘Lacnunga’. Edited and translated with introduction, appendices and commentary and bibliography by Edward Pettit. 2 vols.
Digital facsimile of British Library MS Harley 585 from the British Library at this link.
2001 CE
#9280
Healing plants: Medicine of the Florida Seminole Indians.
2001 CE
#9337
The life of a virus: Tobacco mosaic virus as an experimental model, 1930-1965.
Tobacco mosaic virus was the first virus isolated and crystallized.
2001 CE
#9408
The people's doctors: Samuel Thomson and the American Botanical Movement 1790-1860.
"Samuel Thomson, born in New Hampshire in 1769 to an illiterate farming family, had no formal education, but he learned the elements of botanical medicine from a "root doctor," who he met in his youth. Thomson sought …
2001 CE
#9816
The royal doctors, 1485-1714: Medical personnel at the Tudor and Stuart courts.
"... investigates the influential individuals who attended England's most important patients during a pivotal epoch in the evolution of the state and the medical profession. Over three hundred men [and a handful of wo…
2001 CE
#9932
No place like home: A history of nursing and home care in the United States.
2001 CE
#10091
Black death, white medicine: Bubonic plague and the politics of public health in colonial Senegal, 1914-1945.
2001 CE
#10115
America's botanico-medical movements: Vox populi.
2001 CE
#10256
Spacefaring: The human dimension.
2001 CE
#10335
Dying in the City of the Blues: Sickle cell anemia and the politics of race and health.
"Set in Memphis, home of one of the nation's first sickle cell clinics, Dying in the City of the Blues reveals how the recognition, treatment, social understanding, and symbolism of the disease evolved in the twentiet…
2001 CE
#10417
The technology of orgasm: "Hysteria," the vibrator, and women's sexual satisfaction.
2001 CE
#10428
Out of the dead house: Nineteenth‐century women physicians and the writing of medicine.
2001 CE
#10623
Don't kill your baby: Public health and the decline of breastfeeding in the 19th and 20th Centuries.
2001 CE
#10707
Skulls and skeletons: Human bone collections and accumulations.
2001 CE
#10799
Malaria: Poverty, race, and public health in the United States.
2001 CE
#10838
The scalpel and the butterfly: The war between animal research and animal protection.
2001 CE
#10866
A history of bisexuality.
2001 CE
#11451
Medical informatics: Computer applications in health care and biomedicine. Edited by E. H. Shortliffe, L. E. Perreault, G. Wiederhold, L. M. Fagan.
A fourth expanded edition of this textbook, edited by Shortliffe and James J. Cimino, was published as Biomedical informatics: Computer applications in health care and biomedicine (New York: Springer, 2014).
2001 CE
#12092
Medicine ways: Disease, health and survival among native Americans. Edited by Clifford E. Trafzer and Diane E. Weiner.
2001 CE
#12129
The tale of healer Miguel Perdomo Neira: Medicine, ideologies, and power in the nineteenth-century Andes.
2001 CE
#12645
Classics in movement science. Edited by Mark L. Latash and Vladimir M. Zatsiorsky.
2001 CE
#12975
The medical library of Dr. Meyer Friedman.
Friedman's library, containing copies of many great medical classics, was sold at auction by Sotheby's in New York, on November 16, 2001.
2001 CE–2011 CE
#13227
A History of Speech - Language Pathology.
https://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~duchan/new_history/overview.html "Organization of the website "The website is divided into six historical periods: History of the ancients: 3000 BC to 500 AD Middle ages: 400 to 1500 AD E…
2001 CE
#13288
Surgeons at war: Medical arrangements for the treatment of the sick and wounded in the British army during the late 18th and 19th centuries.
2001 CE
#13389
Devices and desires: A history of contraceptives in America.
2001 CE
#13628
The world of caffeine: The science and culture of the world's most popular drug.
2002 CE
#7013
Dates in ophthalmology.
An annotated chronological listing of significant events in the history of ophthalmology.
2002 CE
#7196
History of the disorders of cardiac rhythm. Third edition.
2002 CE
#7231
Hear, Hear! Six Centuries of Otology, from the Collection of Robert J. Ruben.
Very well annotated descriptions of over 100 classics in the history of otology.
2002 CE
#7536