Ebook: Adventures of a female medical detective: in pursuit of smallpox and AIDS
Author: Guinan Mary, Guinan Mary E., Mather Anne D
- Tags: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY--Personal Memoirs, Epidemiology, Health, Infektionskrankheit, MEDICAL--Infectious Diseases, MEDICAL--Public Health, Physicians Women, Prävention, Women in medicine, Women physicians, Women physicians--United States, Biography, Biographies, Case studies, Guinan Mary -- Health, Women physicians -- United States -- Biography, Women in medicine -- Biography, Epidemiology -- Case studies, Guinan Mary E, United States, MEDICAL -- Public Health, MEDICAL -- Infectious Diseases, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBI
- Year: 2016
- Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
- City: United States
- Language: English
- epub
My first outbreak investigation -- Something to believe in : Operation Smallpox Zero -- A gift of an elephant -- Dr. Herpes -- Healthcare workers and enemy information in a war zone, Pakistan, 1980 -- An AIDS needlestick at a rundown hotel in San Francisco, 1982 -- ACT UP acts up at CDC over the definition of AIDS for women -- The HIV-infected preacher's wife -- Few safe places -- Expert witness for John Doe, the pharmacist, 1991 -- The milk industry challenges CDC over the source of a listeriosis outbreak -- On getting AIDS from a toilet seat and other STD myths and taboos.;"In 1974, a young doctor arrived at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with one goal in mind: to help eradicate smallpox. The only woman physician in her class in the Epidemic Intelligence Service, a two-year epidemiology training program, Mary Guinan soon was selected to join India's Smallpox Eradication Program, which searched out and isolated patients with the disease. By May of 1975, the World Health Organization declared Uttar Pradash smallpox-free. During her barrier-crossing career, Dr. Guinan met arms-seeking Afghan insurgents in Pakistan and got caught in the cross fire between religious groups in Lebanon. She treated some of the first AIDS patients and served as an expert witness in defense of a pharmacist who was denied employment for having HIV--leading to a landmark decision that still protects HIV patients from workplace discrimination. Randy Shilts's best-selling book on the epidemic, And the Band Played On, features her AIDS work. In Adventures of a Female Medical Detective, Guinan weaves together twelve vivid stories of her life in medicine, describing her individual experiences in controlling outbreaks, researching new diseases, and caring for patients with untreatable infections. She offers readers a feisty, engaging, and uniquely female perspective from a time when very few women worked in the field. Occasionally heartbreaking, sometimes hilarious, Guinan's account of her pathbreaking career will inspire public health students and future medical detectives--and give all readers insight into that part of the government exclusively devoted to protecting their health"--;"Mary Guinan broke through many gender barriers to have an exciting and successful career in public health. After completing medical school at Johns Hopkins (she was one of ten women in a class of 110), she spent five months in India working on smallpox, before becoming an STD expert and an instrumental part of the team that uncovered the AIDS epidemic. (She was even featured in the book and movie And the Band Played On.) Dr. Guinan was the first woman to serve as chief scientific advisor for the CDC. Her career over the next several years at the CDC involved AIDS research and education and culminated in her becoming Nevada's first chief public health officer and the founding Dean of the UNLV School of Public Health. In Adventures of a Female Medical Detective, Guinan writes twelve stories about her career at the CDC as a medical detective, providing the unique perspective of being a woman at a time when very few women worked in this field. Throughout the book, Guinan investigates fascinating diseases including smallpox, AIDS, STDs, and listeria. Her adventures in medical forensics are told within the context of the larger public health concerns of the time. She focuses on methods used to find solutions to problems. This first-hand account is written with the general reader in mind; the stories are short, engaging, and informative. The manuscript reviewer, Dr. Joel Breman, describes Mary's work as a collection of "poignant and often hilarious tales ... from a front-line, public health heroine." In addition to its target market of general readers and public health practitioners, this book will be an enthralling addition to undergraduate public health and early MPH courses"--
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