Apr
14
3:30 PM15:30

Closing Remarks: Kathleen Shapley-Quinn, MD

Dr. Shapley-Quinn is Executive Director for the Carolina Advocates for Climate, Health, and Equity (CACHE). She is a family physician and a graduate of UNC’s medical school and family medicine residency. She has worked in primary care for a number of years and served as Medical Director of Alamance County Health Department for many years. Kathleen has been active in advocacy around food security for decades and served as board member for an agency providing advocacy and education for children of incarcerated parents. Her commitment to climate work grows out of both a sense of justice (cultivated early in her Detroit upbringing) as well as a passion for the beauty of our planet and the people who inhabit it.

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Apr
14
2:30 PM14:30

Career Panel

Moderator: Leigh Alon, Johns Hopkins University

Panelists:

  1. Margaret Humphreys, MD, PhD. Josiah Charles Trent Distinguished Professor of the History of Medicine, School of Medicine, Duke University. Professor of History, Trinity College of Arts & Sciences, Duke University. Professor of Medicine, General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Duke University

  2. Rachel Niehuus, MD, PhD. Fellow, Surgical Critical Care, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania.

  3. Seth Berkowitz, MD, MPH, Associate Professor of Medicine, UNC Chapel Hill

  4. E. Berryhill McCarty, MD, MA. Resident, Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh.

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Apr
14
1:15 PM13:15

Concurrent Research Presentations, 5A - 5D

  • Moderator: Cynthia Tang, UNC Chapel Hill

    1. My Name is Pronounced "Suh-dip-doe" — Implementing the Names & Pronunciations Initiative. Sudiptho R. Paul, University of Washington

    2. Israel/Palestine: Finding a Collective Voice in Times of Injustice. Hanne Ochieng Lichtwarck, University of Oslo; and Davina Kaur Patel, University of Oslo

    3. “A State of Becoming:” How Physicians and Trainees Enact Climate-Medicine through Medical Activism. Dhivya Arasappan, University of Pennsylvania

  • Moderator: Lizzy Thomas, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Experiences of Empathy in Patient-Centered Storytelling. Gabrielle Bingener, University of Scranton

    2. Connection and Shared Meaning in Psychosis: A Qualitative Investigation of the Doctor-Patient Relationship. Melissa Uehling, Emory University

    3. The Limitations of Narrative Medicine. Rajeev Dutta, University of California, Irvine

  • Moderator: Wasan Issa and Emily Liu, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. The Mobilization of Fetal Pain in Abortion Legislation. Carolina Rau Steuernagel, University of Oslo

    2. Developing Public Health Policy to Reduce Social Inequality in Health: A Norwegian Perspective. Emma Lengle, University of Oslo

    3. Policy and Practice: How Global and National Action Plans on Antimicrobial Resistance Dis/Enact Change in Tanzania. Sine Grude, University of Oslo

  • Moderator: Evans Lodge, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Formulating Structural Vulnerability: A Phenomenological Analysis and Biopsychosocial-Structural Case Formulation of “Medical Noncompliance” in the Setting of Social Suffering and Historical Trauma. Shane Collins, University of Southern California

    2. Wealth, Health, and Childhood Physical Abuse: A Longitudinal Study of Older Americans. Logan Beyer, Harvard Medical School

    3. The Causal Impact of Poverty Reduction on Housing Conditions of Low-Income, U.S. Children: Evidence from Baby's First Years. Laura Stilwell, Duke University

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Apr
14
12:15 PM12:15

Equal Care: Author Meets Critics ft. Seth Berkowitz

Book: Equal Care: Health Equity, Social Democracy, and the Egalitarian State

Critics:

  1. Jonathan Oberlander, PhD, Professor, Department of Social Medicine, UNC Chapel Hill

  2. Doug MacKay, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy, UNC Chapel Hill

  3. Arrianna Marie Planey, PhD, MA, Assistant Professor, Department of Health Policy and Management, UNC Chapel Hill

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Apr
14
9:15 AM09:15

Concurrent Research Presentations, 4A - 4D

  • Moderator: Jonathan Kuo, Johns Hopkins University

    1. Gifted Care: Reconfiguring HIV/AIDS Caregiving in the Post-Treatment Era. Sumin Yoon, Rice University

    2. Investigating Factors Influencing Access to PrEP and Other Sexual Health Services among Immigrant Latino MSM in Los Angeles County. Martin Santillan, Bienestar Human Services

  • Moderator: Cynthia Tang, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Medicine as Science: The Making of Disciplinary Identity from Scientific Medicine to Biomedicine. Kristen Ann Ehrenberger, University of Pittsburgh

    2. A Reflection of the Physician-Scientist Over the Past 20 Years: A Look at the Founding, Growth, Role, and Impact of the American Physician Scientists Association and Other Physician-Scientist Trainee-Led Organizations. Freddy T. Nguyen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    3. “At Each Menstrual Period She Was Confused, Tense, and Screaming”: Reflecting on a Female Physician’s Perspective in 1929-1930. Leigh Alon, Johns Hopkins University

  • Moderator: Evans Lodge, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    Panelists:

    1. Adeola Oni-Orisan, University of California, Davis

    2. Na'amah Razon, University of California, Davis

    3. Utpal Sandesara, University of California, Los Angeles

    4. Shannon Satterwhite, University of California, Davis

    5. Scott Stonington, University of Michigan

  • Moderators: Wasan Issa and Emily Liu, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Identifying Homelessness in Medicaid Claims: A Mixed-Methods Approach. Michael Enich, Rutgers University

    2. Evaluating Racial and Ethnic Differences in Advanced-Stage Laryngeal Cancer Treatment and Outcomes in Florida: Unmasking the Inequities. Caretia J. Washington, University of Florida

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Apr
13
4:00 PM16:00

Concurrent Research Presentations, 3A - 3D

  • Moderator: Lizzy Thomas, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Food in Polar Explorations: A Gendered, Historical Approach. Margaret Humphreys, Duke University

    2. Naming the Woman Patient: Feminism and Professionalization in Psychiatry, 1978-1990. Sydney Green, Yale School of Medicine

    3. The Lasting Consequences of the Transsexual Conception of Transgender Identity. Madalayne Martin-Olenski, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

  • Moderator: Jonathan Kuo, Johns Hopkins University

    1. “It's Almost Like Your Body's Against You:” Experiences of Menopause in the Criminal Legal System. Elana Jaffe, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    2. From the Structural to the Self, Obstacles to Accessing Equitable Health and Foot Care by Individuals Experiencing Homelessness. Molly Fessler, Duke University

    3. Flexible Care: Genetics, Chronic Pain, and the Politics of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. Caroline Wechsler, University of Pennsylvania

  • Moderator: Victor Madormo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. “Decolonizing Global Health” in Practice: Lessons Learned from a Qualitative Study of US-Mexico Border Healthcare Staff. Kavya Nambiar, University of California, Berkeley & University of California, San Francisco

    2. A Qualitative, Multilingual Evaluation of the Patient Experience of Applying for Hospital Financial Assistance. Emma Tayloe, University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill

  • Moderator: Michael Healey, Johns Hopkins University

    1. Where Neither Health nor Healing Are Available: Structural Competence and What Might Come Next in Medical Anthropology. Rachel Niehuus, University of Pennsylvania

    2. Social Medicine in the Era of Value-Based Care. Ross Perfetti, University of Pennsylvania

    3. On Structural and Intimate Relations. Michelle Munyikwa, University of Pennsylvania

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Apr
13
2:45 PM14:45

Concurrent Research Presentations, 2A - 2D

  • Moderator: Victor Madormo, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Beyond the Badge: New Directions for Transporting Individuals in Mental Health Crisis. Jeremy Fine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    2. Siting Alternative Destinations for Behavioral Health Crises: The "Community" of Community Mental Health. Theodore Michaels, University of California, San Francisco & University of California, Berkeley

    3. Challenges to Psychiatric Care: A Clinical and Anthropological Analysis of Psychosis and Dependency. Blake Erickson, Columbia University

  • Moderator: Leigh Alon, Johns Hopkins University

    1. Expert Witness: Visual Connoisseurship in the History of Military Psychiatric Testing. Adam Ludwig, University of Southern California

    2. Visuality and Deep Learning in Medicine: Possibilities for Frames of Accountability. Ankita Reddy, University of Pennsylvania

  • Moderator: Sean Connelly, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

    1. Not Real Criminals: Opioid Addiction and the Ethnographic Gaze. Ben Sieff, University of Pennsylvania

    2. The Emerging Fentanyl–Xylazine Syndemic in the USA: Challenges and Future Directions. David T. Zhu, Virginia Commonwealth University

  • Moderator: Lizzy Thomas, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    1. Ethnographic Methods and Critical Pedagogy in Medical School Classrooms. Fu-Yu Chang, Kaleidos-Universidad de Cuenca & University of Massachusetts, Amherst

    2. The Racial Politics of Medical Education Technology: Race-Based Medicine in Anki and the AnKing Flashcard Deck. Nora O’Neill, Yale University

    3. Hidden Holiness: Cultivating A Dillardian Attention in Medical Education. Michael Gilbert, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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Apr
13
1:30 PM13:30

Plenary Keynote: Mical Raz, MD, PhD, MSHP

Precarious Parenthood: Poverty, Race and Adoption Politics in the United States

Mical Raz, MD, PhD, MSHP is the Charles E. and Dale L. Phelps Professor in Public Health and Policy; Professor of History; and Professor of Clinical Medicine in the School of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Rochester.

She is introduced by Raúl Necochea López, MSc, PhD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

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Apr
13
10:45 AM10:45

Concurrent Research Presentations, 1A - 1D

  • 1. Making Pathology, “Making People”: A Novel ‘Loop’ in Direct-to-Consumer Health Care. Jeremy Gottlieb, University of California, San Francisco & University of California, Berkeley

    2. G. Frank Lydston and the Business of Medicine in Turn-of-the-Century Chicago. Colin Garon, University of Michigan

    3. Biomedical Expansionism at a Settler University: An “Innovation District” on Indigenous Land. Pat Kinley, Rutgers University

    4. Differential Hospital Participation in Bundled Payments in Communities with Higher Shares of Marginalized Populations. Aidan Crowley, University of Pennsylvania

  • 1. Exploring the Impact of Political Instability on Healthcare Providers and Patients in the Arab World: A Study of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond. Deena Ayesh, University of California, Irvine

    2. Intimate Infrastructures of Accountability: Afterlives of Civil Society Challenges to Mass Atrocities in Sri Lanka. Nipun Kottage, University of Pennsylvania

    3. The Political Multiplicity of Health Care Institutions: An Address from Wallmapu/Southern Chile. Randall Burson, University of Pennsylvania

  • 1. Reintegrating Our Fractured Habitus with a Transdisciplinary Model of Scholarship. Jim Meza, Wayne State University

    2. Rethinking Bioethics: Feminist Approaches to Real World Challenges. Chloe Warpinski, University of Florida

    3. A State of Vital Exhaustion: Examining the History of Surgical Resident Burnout, Depression and Suicide in the U.S. through the Context of Financial Compensation. E. Berryhill McCarty, University of Pittsburgh

    4. The Case for Letting Healthcare Burn. Sebastian Otero, University of Chicago

  • 1. Improving the Experiences of Social Science, Humanities, and Public Health Trainees in MD-PhD Programs. Cambray Smith, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and Ross Perfetti, University of Pennsylvania

    2. Lessons Learned from One Year of Misfits: Building Community and Institutional Support for Applicants and Trainees in Social Science and Humanities MD-PhD Programs. Zoe Boudart, University of Michigan; Isabel Torres, University of Michigan; and Cristian Yanes, University of California, Los Angeles

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