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Mrs. Medicine: Doctors’ Wives and the Making of Modern American Health Care

January 17, 2023

Kelly S. O’Donnell, PhD, Lecturer, History of Science and Medicine, Yale University, and 2019 NLM Michael E. DeBakey Fellow, will offer the National Library of Medicine's 7th annual Michael E. DeBakey Lecture in the History of Medicine, “Mrs. Medicine: Doctors Wives and the Making of Modern American Health Care.” Dr. O’Donnell’s talk will take place via NIH Videocasting at 2pm ET on September 21, 2023.

Marrying a doctor was presented as an aspirational goal for many young women in the twentieth century United States. For those who succeeded in securing a physician husband, however, married life was often hard work. From fundraising for hospital construction to waging political campaigns to answering patients’ phone calls, the doctor’s wife was an essential part of the growth of the American health care system as we know it. Drawing on a wide variety of NLM resources—particularly the publications of medical women’s auxiliary groups—this talk will argue that an understanding of marriage and domestic partnership has been an unfortunately neglected key element in our histories of medicine. 

Submitted by Patricia Brunetto on January 18, 2023