David Mc Bride has taught African American health, medical care, and U. S. history for over twenty-five years at three universities—University of Illinois (Springfield), State University of New York (Binghamton), and most recently, Pennsylvania State University (University Park). He has authored three books on black health and medical history: Missions for Science: U.S. Technology and Medicine in America”s African World (Rutgers U Press, 2002), From TB to AIDS: Epidemics Among Urban Blacks Since 1900 (SUNY Press, 1991); and Integrating the City of Medicine: Blacks in Philadelphia Health Care, 1910-1965 (Temple U Press, 1988). He has also edited (or co-edited) three books on other areas of U. S. public health, world, and educational history. He is a long-standing panelist for the National Institutes of Health’s program on special medical history projects. He has received grants to research black American health care policy and medical history projects from major foundations from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Simon Rifkind Foundation.
2 Ebooks by Kim Geron
James Jennings & Julia S. Jordan-Zachery: Urban Spaces
The control and utilization of urban spaces remains a highly contested issue. Much of the debate centers on issues of economic development versus the maintenance and support of already existing commu …
EPUB
English
DRM
€106.81
Kim Tolley: Professors in the Gig Economy
The Uber-ization of the classroom and what it means for faculty.One of the most significant trends in American higher education over the last decade has been the shift in faculty employment from tenu …
EPUB
English
DRM
€39.34