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Recent Programs
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HariballNational Hairball Awareness Day
April 27, 2010

Visitors enjoyed a unique opportunity to hold an actual animal bezoar (specifically, the specimen was a horse bezoar) during this annual event, which features an array of specimens from the Anatomical Collection’s bezoar collection. Take a look at the photo gallery to see the exhibit and visitors learning more about the bezoar.

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HalloweenThe Art and Science of "OUTBREAK: Plagues that Changed History" with the artist Bryn Barnard
December 5, 2009

Bryn Barnard, author and artist of "OUTBREAK: Plagues that Changed History," hosted three exciting talks on Saturday, December 5, 2009. Bryn discussed his background as a scientific illustrator working on projects as wide-ranging as art for science-fiction paperbacks to working for National Geographic and eventually to writing and illustrating his own non-fiction science history books. His second talk discussed his own interests and research methods that led to his second book OUTBREAK, resulting in the temporary exhibit on display at NMHM through January 22, 2010. His final talk offered a vivid demonstration of the artistic process, as Bryn showed the process from start to finish in painting a cholerae bacterium. Take a look at the photo gallery to see images from the program.

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HalloweenHalloween at the Medical Museum!
October 31, 2009

Nearly 200 children, parents and other visitors participated in one of the most successful Halloween programs ever in the history of the Museum. Kids made 'macaroni skeletons' and medieval plague masks, and had the opportunity to try out some 'scary' yoga postures. A costume contest hosted by Washington Family Magazine was a big hit with visitors. Enjoy the photo gallery for a few snapshots of this fun program. Thanks to all for attending!

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Teddy Bear Clinic"Civil War Reenactment"
October 3, 2009

Over 150 people attended the "Civil War Reenactment" on October 3. Attendees witnessed performances by the Federal City Brass Band, infantry drilling exercises, medical demos and civilian demos (including the role of the Sanitary Commission and Company Laundresses). Young visitors enjoyed making medical unit flags, replicas of the hospital ship USS Red Rover and pin-hole cameras. The reenactment was made possible by members of the 3rd U.S. Regular Infantry Reenactors.

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Teddy Bear Clinic"Teddy Bear Clinic"
September 12, 2009

Children and their parents attended the "Teddy Bear Clinic" on September 12. Museum docents and medical professionals taught kids the importance of leading a healthy lifestyle. Children brought along their favorite stuffed friend as they visited five stations: Vitals, Dental, Immunization, Fitness and Nutrition. The 'Clinic' was held in conjunction with the temporary exhibition, "David Macaulay Presents: The Way We Work: Getting to Know the Amazing Human Body."

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Nurses Day"An Introduction to Techniques in Medical Illustration"
July 11, July 25, August 6, 2009

On July 11 and 25, as well as on August 6, the Museum hosted an introductory class on Medical Illustration. The class was taught by Elizabeth Lockett, Scientific Illustrator and Collections Manager of the Museum's Human Developmental Anatomy Center. Using human and non-human wet specimens, as well as bones, participants crafted beautiful carbon dust illustrations. The experience levels and ages of participants varied. The class was held in conjunction with the temporary exhibition, "David Macaulay Presents: The Way We Work: Getting to Know the Amazing Human Body."

Links


Nurses Day"David Macaulay: Author Talk and Book Signing"
June 12-13, 2009

On Friday, June 12 and Saturday, June 13, acclaimed author and illustrator, David Macaulay, discussed his latest book, "The Way We Work: Getting to Know the Amazing Human Body." Macaulay spoke of the rigorous six-year process he went through to create the book, researching and talking to medical professionals to ensure the accuracy of his drawings. He started this project after channeling his inner curiosity on how little he knew about his own body. Using his drawings, Macaulay showed visitors the ways in which he used real-life situations to illustrate and simplify the inner-workings of the human body.

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Nurses Day"A Conversation on Nursing at Walter Reed"
Second in NMHM's Walter Reed Centennial Year Lecture Series
May 6, 2009

On May 6, WRAMC nurses, as well as the public, gathered to celebrate National Nurses Week at NMHM. Presenters were Debbie Cox, former Army Nurse Corps Historian; CPT Jennifer Easley, Medical/Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, WRAMC; and LTC Patrick Ahearne, Staff Officer, Office of the Army Nurse Corps, Office of the Army Surgeon General. They offered their thoughts on the history, current practices, and future of nursing at Walter Reed.

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Lincoln Exhibit"A Symposium on President Lincoln's Health"
April 18-19, 2009

To commemorate the 200th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln's Birth, NMHM held a Symposium on Lincoln's health in April. Visitors from across the country gathered for this unique event.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

  • Ronald S. Fishman, M.D. & Adriana Da Silveira, D.D.S., M.S., Ph.D. – "Lincoln and His Sons: Familial Synostotic Frontal Plagiocephaly"
  • Laura P. W. Ranum, Ph.D. – "Molecular Genetics with an Historical Twist: Spectrin Mutation Causes Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 5 in President Lincoln's Pedigree"
  • Todd J. Janus, Ph.D., M.D. – "The Neurologic Death of Abraham Lincoln"
  • Thomas M. Scalea, M.D. – "Could Lincoln Have Been Saved"
  • Keynote Address by Chief Justice Frank J. Williams, former chief justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court – "Lincoln's Battles in the White House: Tales of Melancholia, Syphilis, and Leadership"

Sunday, April 19, 2009

  • Todd J. Janus, Ph.D., M.D. – "The Neurologic Death and Possible Rescue of Abraham Lincoln"
  • Kenneth Leetz, M.D. – "Abraham Lincoln, Psychotherapist to the Nation: Lincoln's Depression and Its Transformative Effects on Empathy and Therapeutic Communication Through Metaphors"
  • Armond S. Goldman, M.D. – "Lincoln's Gettysburg Illness"

Links


Brain Awareness10th Annual "Brain Awareness Week"
March 16-20, 2009

Nearly 800 middle school students from the DC area participated in the tenth annual Brain Awareness Week at the Museum last March, sponsored by the Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives. Students were given the chance to hold an actual human brain while learning more about brain anatomy and injuries and learning real-world lessons such as how to protect your brain while playing sports or helping someone suffering a stroke.

Links


Knitting for Marines"Knitting for Marines"
February 28, 2009 and March 28, 2009

On February 28, 2009 and March 28, 2009, the Museum hosted a charity event to knit helmet liners for Marines serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. The liners help to keep soldiers warm during harsh winter weather. The "knitting General," Major General Douglas M. Stone (seen right), lent his support to the project by attending the March knitting event. These events were created with the help of Aimee Reeve, who works at 'Knit Happens' in Alexandria, VA.

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Syphilis in America"Sex, Sin, and Science: A History of Syphilis in America."
February 14, 2009

On Valentine's Day, more than 70 people turned out to hear medical historian John Parascandola discuss his new book 'Sex, Sin and Science: A History of Syphilis in America.' Covering the history of the disease from Colonial times to the present, Parascandola explored several themes that illustrated ways in which non medical factors influence our views of disease, including the role that stigma played in treatment of the afflicted; balancing the rights of individuals versus the need to protect public health; and issues such as focusing blame on groups such as women or minorities. Parascandola, a lecturer at the University of Maryland also served as the Public Health Service Historian until his retirement in 2004.

Links


Health, Illness and the Presidency"Health, Illness and the Presidency"
First in NMHM's Walter Reed Centennial Year Lecture Series
February 4, 2009

On February 3, Lawrence C. Mohr, Jr., MD, former White House Physician and chief resident at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, offered the first in the Museum's Walter Reed Centennial Lecture Series. Mohr's presidential medical career spanned seven years and three presidents (Reagan, Bush and Clinton) and his talk was peppered with interesting insights into the inner workings of the White House. For instance, the White House Physician plans for medical emergencies on any and all presidential excursions or trips, including leisure activities: "We had to develop plans for how to provide medical attention to the President [Bush] while he was fishing and speeding in his boat," Mohr said. "The hardest job I had in the White House was trying to give normal health care in an abnormal environment," Dr. Mohr concluded.

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Borrowed Soldiers"Afternoon Coffee Talk at the Museum: Borrowed Soldiers"
November 12, 2008

Historian Mitch Yockelson visited the Museum on November 12, 2008 to lead a discussion about his book, Borrowed Soldiers: Americans under British Command, 1918.

During the summer and autumn of 1918, two United States Army divisions, fresh from training camps in South Carolina, were attached to the British Army and participated in some of World War I's bloodiest fighting. Attacks against strong German positions on the Western Front resulted in high American casualties and the British were called upon to provide medical support. In his talk, Yockelson discussed how the 'doughboys' were evacuated from the battlefield and taken to British hospitals for treatment.

Links


Carville, the Landscape of Stigma"Carville, the Landscape of Stigma"
August 27, 2008

Elizabeth Schexnyder, curator of the National Hansen's Disease Museum, visited the Museum in late August to see our temporary 'Triumph at Carville' exhibit and offered an engaging conversation on the significance of the social response to leprosy in the development of the National Leprosarium in Carville, Louisiana. She described the process of "othering" human beings diagnosed with leprosy and how other socio-historical factors affecting the disease stigma shaped the unique landscape--both social and physical--of the National Leprosarium.

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