{"id":27462,"date":"2023-09-14T11:00:18","date_gmt":"2023-09-14T15:00:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=27462"},"modified":"2024-10-21T10:57:36","modified_gmt":"2024-10-21T14:57:36","slug":"mrs-medicine-doctors-wives-and-the-making-of-modern-american-health-care","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2023\/09\/14\/mrs-medicine-doctors-wives-and-the-making-of-modern-american-health-care\/","title":{"rendered":"Mrs. Medicine: Doctors\u2019 Wives and the Making of Modern American Health Care"},"content":{"rendered":"

Kelly O’Donnell, PhD will give the 7th annual Michael E. DeBakey Lecture in the History of Medicine<\/a> on Thursday, September 21, 2023 at 2:00 PM ET. This talk will be live-streamed<\/a> globally, and archived<\/a>, by NIH VideoCasting<\/a> and live-streamed on the NLM YouTube Channel<\/a>. <\/em>Dr. Kelly O’Donnell is Visiting Assistant Professor of U.S. History at Bryn Mawr College, and 2019 NLM Michael E. DeBakey Fellow<\/a>.<\/em> Circulating Now interviewed her about her research and <\/em>upcoming <\/em>talk<\/em>.<\/em><\/p>\n

Circulating Now: <\/strong>Please tell us a little about yourself. Where are you from? What do you do? What is your typical workday like?
\n<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"Photograph<\/a>Kelly O’Donnell: <\/strong>I am a historian of medicine and gender in the modern United States. I recently started a new position as a Visiting Assistant Professor of U.S. History at Bryn Mawr College. I am originally from Philadelphia and its western suburbs (Delco, PA), so I am thrilled to be back home. I spent the past two years as a Lecturer in History of Science and Medicine at Yale University, which is also where I earned my PhD in 2015.<\/p>\n

Classes just started, so I am settling in and decorating my office to make it feel cozier. It\u2019s a gorgeous old building, and there is a fireplace, so that part isn\u2019t hard! I am the modern Americanist in my department, but I contribute to our Health Studies program as well, so this semester I am teaching a History of Reproductive Health class and an American Health Politics seminar. I am also fortunate to be co-teaching our senior capstone course with a very generous colleague. (Working with seniors on their theses has always been my favorite.)<\/p>\n

When I am not teaching, I am completing my first book on the history of the birth control pill and the debate in the 1970s over its potential side effects. I am eager to finally wrap that up and move on full-time to my next project, on the history of doctors\u2019 wives in American medicine. I began research for this new project back initially in 2018 and was a DeBakey Fellow in 2019. It has been my motivation, my fun side hobby, and I am excited to share some of that research in this lecture.<\/p>\n

When I am not teaching or <\/em>researching, I am either in the kitchen concocting vegetarian dishes or out on a trail running very slowly.<\/p>\n

CN: <\/strong>What initially sparked your interest in the history of medicine?<\/p>\n

\"First<\/a>
The O.O.A. Auxiliary Bulletin<\/em>, March, 1957
National Library of Medicine #19310070R<\/a><\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

KO: <\/strong>I spent a lot of time in doctors\u2019 offices growing up\u2014not so much as a patient myself, but observing. When I was very young, my mother worked as a medical assistant for a couple of different doctors in Southwest Philly. They had these classic converted rowhouse offices on residential streets. Very old school, very different from the types of spaces I\u2019d later encounter. To this day I am fascinated by physical spaces, setups, and fundamentally what health care practices look like in person (and how that can vary from place to place).<\/p>\n

As I got into my preteen and teen years, both of my parents became seriously ill. My mother was no longer able to work. Much of her life revolved around visiting doctors to address her chronic pain and cardiovascular problems, then qualifying for disability. I also spent my sophomore and junior years of high school going to appointments with my dad, who passed away from liver disease when I was 16.<\/p>\n

I never had any interest in becoming a doctor myself\u2014I am notoriously squeamish. But when I got into studying the history of science and science and technology studies in college, I naturally gravitated towards medicine and health care. I had all these unique experiences and so many lingering questions from the people and practices I had encountered growing up. When I discovered the social history of medicine, a lightbulb clicked, and I knew that was what I wanted to do. So, I applied to PhD programs as a senior and the rest is history.<\/p>\n

CN:<\/strong> Your talk, \u201cMrs. Medicine: Doctors\u2019 Wives and the Making of Modern American Health Care<\/a>,\u201d\u00a0<\/strong>explores the roles, expectations, and contributions of spouses of physicians in the twentieth century. How did the experience of spouses associated with the medical field differ from those in other segments of society?<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
Bulletin of the Women\u2019s Auxiliary to the American Medical Association<\/em>, September, 1959
National Library of Medicine #7503459<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

KO: <\/strong>That\u2019s a great question, and one that I am hoping to answer more concretely as I get further into this research. On the one hand, you could say that medical marriages were very similar to others when it came to their participants\u2019 professional identities, especially when you\u2019re thinking about earlier in the 20th century or farther back into the 19th. In an era when married women\u2014particularly of the middle and upper classes\u2014did not work outside the home in the way that they do today, many types of marriages did essentially become family business arrangements. Women would perform all kinds of labor that later would become paid labor, from cleaning to bookkeeping to interacting with customers. So, in that way, if you\u2019re thinking for example about a small private medical practice, that is a pretty standard family business configuration\u2014and perhaps doctors\u2019 spouses are simply more obvious or extreme versions of that vein in history of marriage.<\/p>\n

On the other hand, I have been arguing that the role of \u201cdoctor\u2019s wife\u201d was much more distinct. Particularly once we get into the mid-twentieth century peak medical auxiliary organizing era, to be a doctor\u2019s wife meant something particular, and it was an identity that a lot of women coalesced and organized around. As I\u2019ll get into in my lecture, women\u2019s medical auxiliaries (comprising of wives of physicians) viewed themselves as uniquely positioned between the medical profession and the community it served\u2014as a conduit, a translator, a vital link in public health work. Doctors\u2019 wives, regardless of their own professional backgrounds (as a nurse or teacher, for example), were seen as having their own type of special expertise because of their intimate knowledge of the profession from almost the inside. The best comparison would be something like a pastor\u2019s wife. This begins to fracture in the 1970s with the rise of women\u2019s labor force participation and the increasing expectation that they would have their own careers and independent professional identities. But for a few generations, there was a strong sense of this hybrid, spousal authority.<\/p>\n

Medical marriages are also a really great window in the stressors experienced by those in the profession because you can see how things like increased residency training or the shift to more hospital based labor practices play out on a deeply personal scale.<\/p>\n

CN:<\/strong> In researching this subject, were you drawn to any particular individual\u2019s story?
\n<\/strong><\/p>\n

KO: <\/strong>One thing I quickly became really interested in is how physicians\u2019 papers are donated to and organized in a given archive. When I started researching this project, that\u2019s where I began\u2014personal papers. That\u2019s where historians typically begin. Spouses often play a major role in that process generally and I\u2019ve found that ironically (or perhaps intentionally) their own lives and contributions tend to get obscured in these collections. In a typical collection of a physician\u2019s papers, everything is hyper-focused on their career and their achievements in medicine. So, it is surprisingly difficult to find doctors\u2019 wives in the archives of the history of medicine!<\/p>\n