2024-03-29T14:33:11Zhttps://thescholarship.ecu.edu/oai/requestoai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/30662021-03-03T20:53:35Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
Dying in the city of the blues: sickle cell anemia and the politics of race and health
Savitt, Todd L.
Sickle cell anemia
African Americans
Memphis disease history
2011-01-21T19:34:35Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
2011-01-21T19:34:35Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
2002-10
Article
Medical History; 46:4 p. 608-609
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3066
en_US
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/histmed/publications/med_hist
application/pdf
East Carolina University
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/30852021-03-03T20:57:47Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
'A journal of our own': the Medical and Surgical Observer at the beginnings of an African-American medical profession in late 19th-century America. Part two.
Savitt, Todd L.
African Americans
Medical politics
Medical journals
2011-01-21T21:06:43Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
2011-01-21T21:06:43Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
1996-02
Article
Journal of the National Medical Association; 88:2 p. 115-122
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3085
PMC2608011
en_US
http://www.nmanet.org/index.php/publications_sub/jnma
application/pdf
East Carolina University
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/30842021-03-03T20:53:41Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
'A journal of our own': the Medical and Surgical Observer at the beginnings of an African-American medical profession in late 19th-century America. Part one.
Savitt, Todd L.
African Americans
Medical journals
Medical education
2011-01-21T21:06:07Z
2011-05-17T00:37:01Z
2011-01-21T21:06:07Z
2011-05-17T00:37:01Z
1996-01
Article
Journal of the National Medical Association; 88:1 p. 52-60
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3084
PMC2607993
en_US
http://www.nmanet.org/index.php/publications_sub/jnma
application/pdf
East Carolina University
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/34282022-12-13T14:46:20Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
Dr De Ville Responds
DeVille, Kenneth M.
Ethical decision making
Legal guides
2011-04-28T19:20:46Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
2011-04-28T19:20:46Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
1994-08
Article
Western Journal of Medicine; 161:2 p. 192-193
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3428
PMC1022547
en_US
http://www.ajwrb.org/wjm/wjm.htm
Author notified of opt-out rights by Cammie Jennings prior to upload of this article.
application/pdf
East Carolina University
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/30872021-03-03T20:53:39Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
Another dimension to the black Diaspora. Diet, disease, and racism
Savitt, Todd L.
Book reviews
Black health
Antebellum South health conditions
2011-01-21T21:10:25Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
2011-01-21T21:10:25Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
1983-07
Article
Medical History; 27:3 p. 328-329
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3087
PMC1139356
en_US
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/histmed/publications/med_hist
application/pdf
East Carolina University
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/30862021-03-03T20:53:39Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
Abraham Flexner and the black medical schools.
Savitt, Todd L.
Black medical schools
Flexner Report
Education
Howard University
Meharry Medical College
"Abraham Flexner and the Black Medical Schools" first appeared in Beyond Flexner: Medical Education in the Twentieth Century, Barbara Barzansky and Norman Gevitz, eds. Copyright 1992 by Barbara Barzansky and Norman Gevitz. Reproduced with permission of Greenwood Publishing Group Inc., Westport, CT. The article will be reprnted in a collection of the author's writings on African-American medical history called Race and Medicine in Nineteenthand Early-Twentieth-Century America, to be published in December 2006 by Kent State University Press and published here with permission of the Kent State University Press. Originally published J Natl Med Assoc. Vol. 98, No. 9, Sep 2006.
2011-01-21T21:07:09Z
2011-05-17T00:37:01Z
2011-01-21T21:07:09Z
2011-05-17T00:37:01Z
2006-09
Article
Journal of the National Medical Association; 98:9 p. 1415-1424
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3086
PMC2569717
en_US
http://www.nmanet.org/index.php/publications_sub/jnma
application/pdf
East Carolina University
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/32552021-03-03T20:53:31Zcom_10342_74com_10342_73col_10342_91
Defending Diversity: Affirmative Action and Medical Education
DeVille, Kenneth M.
Affirmative action
Medical education
Admission policy
Affirmative action programs of all types are under attack legally and politically. Although medical schools have not been specifically targeted, their affirmative action programs, like others in higher education, are potentially in danger. This article examines the current legal status of affirmative action in medical education and concludes that a refurbished defense of such programs is essential if they are to survive impending judicial and political scrutiny. An analysis of existing case law and available evidence suggests that a carefully reinvigorated diversity argument is the tactic most likely to pass constitutional muster, as well as the justification most likely to blunt growing public and political opposition to admissions policies that take race and ethnicity into consideration. Originally published American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 89, No. 8, Aug 1999
2011-02-28T19:09:45Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
2011-02-28T19:09:45Z
2011-05-17T00:37:02Z
1999-08
Article
American Journal of Public Health; 89:8 p. 1256-1261
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3255
PMC1508677
10.2105/AJPH.89.8.1256
en_US
http://ajph.aphapublications.org/contents-by-date.1999.dtl
Author notified of opt-out rights by Cammie Jennings.
application/pdf
East Carolina University