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Technology, health, and the patient consumer in the twentieth century
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19 January 2027
MEDICAL / History, History of medicine, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / History, SCIENCE / History, History of engineering and technology, Medical sociology, History of science
Rachel Elder is Research Associate in the Department of Social Studies of Medicine at McGill University
Thomas Schlich is James McGill Professor in the History of Medicine and Department Chair of the Department of Social Studies of Medicine at McGill University
Introduction: Technology and health in the age of the patient consumer – Thomas Schlich and Rachel Elder
Part I: New technologies and patient markets
1 Dental X- rays and the imagined patient – Vivien Hamilton
2 Chronic neglect: Race, dialysis, and vulnerable patienthood – Richard M. Mizelle, Jr
3 Patients, ‘consumer sovereignty’, and technological change: The adoption of minimally invasive surgery – Cynthia L. Tang
Part II: Informed patients and patient information
4 Tampons, technology, and toxic shock syndrome: From consumer to patient to informant – Sharra Vostral
5 Just stories: Side effects and the patient voice online – Antoine Lentacker
Part III: Co-opting disease, promoting prevention and healing
6 Sunbeds, dihydroxyacetone (DHA) fake tan, and MelanoTan injections: A history of ‘safe’ tanning
technologies – Fabiola Creed
7 Against ‘prevention pills’: North American breast cancer activists and chemoprevention – Grazia De Michele
8 ‘Mental health is not fashion’: RIP shirts, stigma, and consumerism – Christopher M. Rudeen
Index