Session 1: Segregation and Civil Rights in the American Health System
Medicine & Public Health
•
36m
In academic histories and popular films and novels, the US civil rights movement centers on bus boycotts, voting booths, water fountains, classrooms, and courtrooms. But did protesters ever picket doctor's offices, hospitals, medical schools, or public health clinics? Join Karen Kruse Thomas from the Bloomberg School of Public Health as she explores the medical civil rights movement and its larger impact on major policy reforms in health, education, and social welfare. Understand the history behind racial disparities in health access and outcomes that continue to inform national debates over issues such as Black Lives Matter and the response to COVID-19. Session 1 focuses on scientific racism in medicine and public health.
Up Next in Medicine & Public Health
-
Reframing Child Sexual Abuse as a Pre...
Recognizing that April marks National Sexual Assault Awareness Month and Child Abuse Prevention Month, the Moore Center for the Prevention of Child Sexual Abuse and Hopkins at Home present a series of conversations featuring faculty from the Bloomberg School of Public Health discussing this impor...
-
No One Was Immune: The History and Sc...
Join John Hessler for a lecture focused on the genomics and geospatial transmission of infectious disease, concentrating on the VARV Variola virus (Smallpox), from which we have the oldest complete genome sequence, on the science of ancient DNA sequencing, and on the complexities of mapping the g...
-
Neglected Tropical Diseases
Brought to you by Hopkins at Home and the Office of Alumni Relations / Lifelong Learning.
Join us for a virtual webinar examining the world of tropical disease through the lens of Malaria and Onchocerciasis (also known as Riverblindness). On the heels of a global pandemic, disease transmission f...