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Program in the History of Medicine & Science
| Recent Graduates |
- Crispin Barker
- Cornell, B.A.; Yale, M.A.; Yale, M.S.; Yale, M.Phil; Yale, Ph.D.
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Frederick
R. Davis
Harvard, A.B.; U. of Florida, M.A.; Yale, M.Phil.,
Ph.D.
Asst. Prof. of History, Florida St. U., Tallahassee,
FL
fdavis@fsu.edu | website
[external link]
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David
Hecht
Brandeis University, B.A.; Yale, Ph.D.
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Gretchen
Krueger
Postdoctoral Fellow, Dept. of Hist. of Med.,
Johns Hopkins U.
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Danian
Hu
Case-Western Reserve U., M.A.; Yale, Ph.D.
Asst. Prof., City College of the City U. of
New York, New York
danian.hu@aya.yale.edu
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Randy
Kidd
The Colorado College, B.A.; Western Wash. U.,
M.A.; Yale, Ph.D.
rrk23@drexel.edu
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Gregory Lampros
Yale M.A.
Greg Lampros came to yale after many successful years in business to pursue a masters degree in History of Science and Medicine, a longstanding dream. He wrote an excellent masters thesis on the identification of Tay-Sachs disease as a genetic affliction, focusing on the research and career of the neurologist Bernard Sachs, and received his degree in May 2006. He has now returned to the world of business
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Beth
Linker, Assistant Professor, History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania
- Ithaca College, B.S.; Michigan State U., M.A.; Yale U., Ph.D.
Beth Linker teaches courses in the history of medicine and science at UPenn's History and Sociology of Science Department. Her research interests include the social and cultural history of U.S. medicine in the 19th and 20th centuries, disability history, war studies, as well as the history of bioethics and health care policy.
linker@sas.upenn.eduIWebsite (external link)
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- Kari McLeod
- University of Alberta, B.A.; Carlton University, M.A.; Yale U., M.A.; Yale U., M.Phil.; Yale U., Ph.D.
Christiane
Nockels Fabbri
- U. de Provence, Lic. L; Yale U., P.A.; Yale U., M.A.; Yale U., M.Phil.; Yale U., Ph.D.
Clinician, Yale University Health Services
- Christiane's academic interests include medieval and early modern medicine, the concept of retrospective diagnosis, and the interface between medicine and popular culture. She completed her doctoral studies in 2006 and is currently working on a project involving early studies of blood circulation in the brain. In 2008, she joined the Department of Internal Medicine at YUHS as Primary Care Clinician.
christiane.nockels@yale.edu
- Todd Olszewski
- Washington University in St. Louis, B.A.; Yale, M.A.; Yale M.Phil.; Yale Ph.D.
Sally Romano
Harvard, B.A.; Yale, M.A.; Yale, M.Phil.; Yale Ph.D.
Sally Romano is pursuing a joint MD/PhD degree. After completing her dissertation, "The Dark Side of the Sun: Skin Cancer, Sunscreen, and Risk in Twentieth-Century America" and receiving her Ph.D. in May of 2006, she is presently completing the medical portion of her degree. Before coming to Yale, she received an A.B. in History and Science from Harvard University (1999). A native of Connecticut, Sally currently lives in West Haven with her husband, Scott. She is an avid skier and sports fan.
sally.romano@yale.edu
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Neeraja Sankaran
Panjab University, B.Sc.; University of Alberta, M.Sc.; U.C. at Santa Cruz, Cert. Sci. Writing; Yale Ph.D.
Neeraja Sankaran holds a post-doctoral teaching fellowship at the American University in Cairo where she is teaching courses on Scientific Thinking and other courses integrating the sciences and humanities. She received her Ph.D. in Dec. 2006 with a dissertation that focused on the development of concepts of bacteriophage and viruses in the early 20th century via a study of the investigative pathway of Frank Macfarlane Burnet. In addition to the history of science, Neeraja is also a science writer with two books to her credit: Microbes and People: An A-Z of Important Microorganisms in Our Lives (Oryx Press, 2001) and The Human Genome Sourcebook (with co-author Dr. Tara Acharya) (Greenwood Press, 2005).
neeraja@aucegypt.edu
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Mary Yearl
Wellesley College, B.A.; Yale, M.A.; University of Cambridge, M.Phil.; Yale, Ph.D.
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