Center for Race and Ethnicity
at Rutgers University
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Keith Wailoo, Director Martin Luther King, Jr. Professor of History Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research |
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| Keith Wailoo, Director of the Center for Race and Ethnicity at Rutgers, is Professor of History jointly appointed in the Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research.
He is author of richly awarded books examining the cultural politics of
disease in America. His work focuses principally on health care
politics, the ethnic and racial relations of medicine, and the ways
scientific and technological understandings have interacted with
politics, society, and culture to shape health experiences, disease
disparities, and social responses to disease in the 20th century and
into the 21st century. Wailoo is co-author (with Stephen Pemberton) of The Troubled Dream of Genetic Medicine: Ethnicity and Innovation in Tay-Sachs, Cystic Fibrosis, Sickle Cell Disease (2006, Johns Hopkins University Press),a comparative history of these "ethnic maladies." The book examines why racial and ethnic controversies often become attached to discussions of modern genetics, and how theories about genetic difference become entangled with political debates about cultural and group differences in America. He is co-editor (with Julie Livingston and Peter Guarnaccia) of A Death Retold: Jesica Santillan, The Bungled Transplant, and Paradoxes of Medical Citizenship (University of North Carolina Press, 2006), a book that brings together scholars from a wide range of fields--from transplant medicine to anthropology, and from history to medical ethics--to revisit a recent and notorious medical error in 2003 (involving a young, undocumented Mexican immigrant and a mismatched heart-lung transplant) to illuminate contemporary crises in health care. His 2001 book, Dying in the City of the Blues: Sickle Cell Anemia and the Politics of Race and Health (University of North Carolina Press) is an account of the disease’s early 20th century invisibility, its gradual rise to clinical, scientific, and political prominence in the 1950s and 1960s, and its changing socio-political significance into the era of managed care. The book received numerous awards, among them the Lillian Smith Book Award for non-fiction writing on race and social justice, the Susanne Glasscock Humanities Book Award for Interdisciplinary Scholarship, an award for scholarship on race, ethnicity, and politics from the American Political Science Association, and the 2005 William H. Welch Medal from the American Association for the History of Medicine. The book also received an Honor Book Award from the New Jersey Council for the Humanities and a community service award from the Sickle Cell/Thalassemia Patients Network (New York). Wailoo's 1997 Drawing Blood: Technology and Disease Identity in Twentieth-Century American (Johns Hopkins University Press) explores the ways in which technological change and cultural assumptions about different patient reshaped approaches to blood and blood disease. The book received the 1997 Arthur Viseltear Award from the American Public Health Association. Keith Wailoo is also a co-editor, with political economist Mark Schlesinger and health law scholar Tim Jost, of a special double issue of the Journal for Health Politics, Policy, and Law (August-October 2004) entitled Transforming American Medicine: A Twenty-Year Retrospective on The Social Transformation of American Medicine. Professor Wailoo is currently completing two studies: How Cancer Crossed the Color Line: Race and Disease in America (to be published by Oxford University Press); and The Cultural Politics of Pain: Medicine, Society, and the Struggle for Relief in America. During the academic year 2006-2007, he is a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University in Stanford, California. His research has been supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Investigator Award in 2002. Professor Wailoo’s research has also been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Center for Human Genome Research (Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues rogram), and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. In 1999, Professor Wailoo received the prestigious James S. McDonnell Centennial Fellowship in the History of Science, a $1,000,000 multiyear award to examine the history of cancer, immunology, genetics, and pain in 20th century society. The McDonnell Fellowship has supported many conferences on such topics as: The Cultural Transformation of Cancer (1999); The Politics of Racial Health (2001); The Problem of Pain in Medicine, Culture, and Public Policy (2002); and Beyond the Bungled Transplant: Jessica Santillan and High-Tech Medicine in Cultural Perspective (2004 and 2005). Professor Wailoo teaches courses on a health and history at the undergraduate and graduate levels including: Drugs, Medicine and Society in America; Health Care and Society in America; Sex, Sexuality, and Medicine; and Major Trends in the Cultural History of Medicine. In the past, he has also taught courses on The Politics of Pain Medicine; The History of Child Health in America; Racial Health and the American South; and Disease in Historical Perspective. |
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(732) 932-8419 (732) 932-1358 |
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http://history.rutgers.edu/People/kwailoo.htm http://www.ihhcpar.rutgers.edu/about_us/members.asp?v=2&d=1&i=291 |
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