Imperial pathways of mobility: doctoring women and the American surgical enterprise in Iran, 1888-1940
History of vaccine resistance in Canada
Navigating Canadian healthcare before Medicare
Ceilidh Auger-Day researches how Canadians made individual health-related decisions when facing injury or illness between 1900-1940.
Read MoreThe therapeutic use of cinema to treat mentally ill patients (1895-1950)
Martin Beaulieu examines the therapeutic use of cinema by the mental health professions, trying to understand why and how the cinema was considered a therapeutic tool to treat mental disorders.
Read MoreHealth under occupation: Haitian encounters with U.S. imperial medicine, 1915-1934
Matthew Davidson examines U.S. military occupation in Haiti and the multiple ways it impacted Haiti’s public health.
Read MoreDebilitated Veterans of the First World War
Kyle Falcon researches how disabled veterans coped with war-related debilities and the impact these had on their domestic lives.
Read MoreThe effect of tuberculosis on men during and after the First World War
Eric Story examines the history of tuberculosis in the era of the First World War.
Read MoreHome Bodies: Wearable healthcare technologies from 1880s to 1940s
Maia Woolner works to trace the circulation and consumption of medico-electric devices and their affiliated healthcare products and advertisements.
Read MoreUnderstanding AI implications for stigma and compassion in mental health and addiction
Daniel seeks to identify whether the presence of AI language related to mental health and addiction influences clinicians’ levels of stigma, empathy, and compassion.
Read MoreExploring the impact of genomics and AI on health equity and compassionate care in oncology
Ben is examining potential disparities arising from the application of genomics and machine learning to predict clinical outcomes.
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