CFP deadline extended-- PAH History of Women's Health Conference
Call for Papers Extended to November 13, 2012
The Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, will host its
eighth annual History of Women's Health Conference on Wednesday, April 17,
2013. We invite interested persons to send a one to two page proposal or abstract
of your topic by Tuesday, November 13, 2012 for consideration. The History of Women's Health Conference
focuses on areas of women's health from the 18th century to the present. This conference encourages interdisciplinary
work. Topics of interest include, but
are not limited to, obstetrics and gynecology (fertility, infertility, birth
control methods, menopause), adolescence (health, cultural influences, body
image, puberty, eating disorders), mental health topics, aging concerns,
women's health as consumer health, the female as conveyed in popular culture,
overall women's health, access to health care, minority health, nursing,
midwifery, female healers, and more.
Jacqueline H. Wolf, PhD, professor of the history of
medicine, Department of Social Medicine at the Ohio University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine will be our keynote speaker, presenting "Cutting
Risk: Obstetricians' Evolving Views of Cesarean Sections,
1870-2010".
She is the author of Deliver Me from Pain: Anesthesia and
Birth in America (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009) and Don't Kill Your
Baby:
Public Health and the Decline of Breastfeeding in the
19th and 20th Centuries (Ohio State University Press, 2001).
The History of Women's Health Conference began in 2006 as
part of the Pennsylvania Hospital's celebration of co-founder Benjamin
Franklin's tercentenary. Each year
since, scholars from the humanities and health care professionals gather to
discuss the past, present, and future state of women's health. The conference is jointly sponsored by the
Obstetrics and Gynecology Department and the Pennsylvania Hospital Historic
Collection.