Dates:October 31 - December 12, 2024
Meets:Thursdays, October 31 - December 12, 2024, 1-3 p.m.
Location:The Carnegie
Cost: $0.00

There are still openings remaining at this time.

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Please note: this course requires membership in Annual Membership or Annual Membership or Semi-Annual Membership or Associate Membership or Carnegie Membership


The new American republic began as 13 states perched on the Atlantic and grew in 100 years to a nation spanning the continent, with a population swelling from five million to 76 million. This included 31 million immigrants, each of whom arrived with their own social structures, cultural values, religious beliefs, and health practices. The goal of this course is to understand how America reforged, enriched, and tailored European medicine to meet the health needs and beliefs of its diverse, ballooning, and geographically sprawling population. These needs created a medically pluralistic environment of diverse healers, therapeutics, and institutions.

This course addresses how traditional 19th-century European medicine, which relied on painful and less than efficacious treatments of purgatives and bleeding, was challenged by new American healing systems such as osteopathy, homeopathy, naturopathy, Adventism, and others. Medicinal botanicals and healing therapies from Asia, Africa, and Native America expanded therapeutic choices available to Americans in the 19th century. America became the world leader in developing patented medicines. We will look at how women and Black medical schools and hospitals provided education and specialized care for excluded Americans, as well as the role of Johns Hopkins in standardizing medical education. Throughout the course we discuss how politics and economic power limited access to care and how the legacy of 19th-century medical pluralism impacts our present-day system of care.
Fee: $0.00
Hours:12.00

The Carnegie

10100 Washingtonian Blvd.
Gaithersburg, MD 20878

Krystyna Gurstelle

Krystyna Gurstelle, DMH, holds a Doctorate in Medical Humanities (DMH) from Drew University, which she completed in 2022 at the age of 73. Her doctoral research was focused on medical history, the role of the patient narrative and medical anthropology. Prior to retirement, she worked for 40 years in the pharmaceutical industry in oncology research with responsibility for communication around clinical studies and drug approvals, and served as a liaison to patient advocacy groups. Her BA is in Mathematics and her MS is in Healthcare Management. In New Jersey, she was active in the Florham Institute for Lifetime Learning (FILL) at Fairleigh Dickinson University and since moving to Maryland has enjoyed participating in the Osher program at Johns Hopkins.
Date Day Time Location
10/31/2024Thursday1 PM to 3 PM The Carnegie
11/07/2024Thursday1 PM to 3 PM The Carnegie
11/14/2024Thursday1 PM to 3 PM The Carnegie
11/21/2024Thursday1 PM to 3 PM The Carnegie
12/05/2024Thursday1 PM to 3 PM The Carnegie
12/12/2024Thursday1 PM to 3 PM The Carnegie

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