Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

March/April 2006  Volume 2 Issue 2

Inside this issue

Cover stories

Preserving options, sustaining hope

$2 million gift will support training of physician-scientists

Boehringer and Yale combine strengths in new research alliance

Partnerships

Gift honors Nobelist, sponsors visits by top neuroscientists

Grants & contracts

People

Lifelines: Mending the human machine

Yale scientist shares $1 million Dan David prize for work on cell signaling and cancer

CT scanning expert is new leader of Yale radiologists

Medical historian Warner is appointed to Avalon Professorship

Out & about

Awards & honors

Science

Can microRNAs put the brakes on cancer?

Advances: Bullies are no match for gene knockout | Parasite’s accomplice gets genetic mug | Along for the ride when cells divide | Are skin cells guards or go-betweens?

Health

Student-run clinic is a HAVEN for uninsured

The power of Botox, a drug with many faces

Education

Yale innovation in the art of observation extends its reach

 



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Medical historian Warner is appointed to Avalon Professorship

John Warner photo.

John Warner

John Harley Warner, Ph.D., chair of the Section of the History of Medicine at the School of Medicine, was named Avalon Professor of the History of Medicine by the Yale Corporation in December.

Warner is an expert on the cultural and social history of medicine in the United States during the 19th and 20th centuries. In his current research, he is analyzing the narrative accounts found in historical patient records to illuminate the evolution of modern medical practice.

After receiving his doctorate in the history of science from Harvard University in 1984, Warner was a postdoctoral fellow at the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine in London. He joined the medical school faculty as assistant professor of the history of medicine in 1986 and became chair of the section in 2002.

Under Warner’s leadership as founding chair in 2002 of the newly constituted Program in the History of Science and Medicine, Yale College’s undergraduate major in the History of Science/History of Medicine, one of Yale’s 10 largest majors, attracts about 40 new students per year.

Warner is the author of numerous scholarly articles and two books, Against the Spirit of System: The French Impulse in Nineteenth-Century American Medicine and The Therapeutic Perspective: Medical Practice, Knowledge, and Identity in America, 1820–1885, which was awarded the William H. Welch Medal from the American Association for the History of Medicine in 1991.

Warner is the third Yale faculty member to be named to the Avalon Professorship, which was established with a grant from the Avalon Foundation, now part of the Mellon Foundation, in the early 1960s.

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