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Department History

The Department of Social Studies of Medicine was established in 1966 in ۲ݮƵ University’s Faculty of Medicine. Often referred to by its acronym, “SSoM,” our department has been known by three different names, the Department of History of Medicine (1966-81), the Department of Humanities and Social Studies in Medicine (1981-1992), and since then Department of Social Studies of Medicine. We mark the founding of the Department of Social Studies of Medicine with the hiring of Don Bates, who was recruited in July 1966 from Johns Hopkins University to be Associate Professor and Acting Osler Librarian. The new department was supported by three foundational grants and endowments: $50,000 from the Wellcome Trust; Dr Thomas F Cotton endowed a Chair in 1965; and in 1990, Dr Joseph Nathanson, an alumnus of ۲ݮƵ University with a longstanding interest in the history of medicine, left a substantial bequest to ۲ݮƵ for the history and culture of Medicine. Fortunately for us, the Nathanson funding still today supports some of the department’s operations.

Philip Teigen, Maureen Seguy, Audrey Roussel, Trish Birks, George Weisz, Joe Lella Don Bates, Margaret Lock, Anne Joseph, Edward Bensley
This group photograph from circa 1979 includes the four founding members of the Department of Social Studies of Medicine among other colleagues. Philip Teigen, Maureen Seguy, Audrey Roussel, Trish Birks, George Weisz, Joe Lella Don Bates, Margaret Lock, Anne Joseph, Edward Bensley
Bates’ dream of an interdisciplinary department became a reality in the 1970s, with the arrival of sociologist Joe Lella, anthropologist Margaret Lock, and historian George Weisz. By the 1980s this original vision was still going strong, as is clear from early annual reports like this one in the ۲ݮƵ University Archives:

“Ħ.the mission of the Department is twofold: to make an intelligible connection between individual medical practice and the micros/macro-social forces associated with health care at work in our society; and to relate the student’s career in medicine to his or her life as a whole. We believe that these two are related, that a social conscience and consciousness, needed to adapt to ۲ݮƵ conditions and philosophies of health care, can only be developed hand-in-hand with a growing awareness and understanding of oneself. Unlike most medical teaching, therefore, our focus is at least as much on the physician-to-be as on the patient, in the belief that the behavior which students need to understand most is their own.”

The power of the department’s founding vision is still strong. We are currently twelve faculty members, many with cross appointments or associate memberships in DEEP (Equity, Ethics and Policy), History and Classical Studies, Anthropology, Sociology, and the School of Architecture. In 2016, we gathered to celebrate the department’s 50th anniversary. As part of our celebrations, PhD student Cynthia Tang conducted interviews with three of the founding members of SSoM: Joe Lella, Margaret Lock, and George Weisz. 

Interviews

three founding members of SSoM

Interviews with three founding members of SSoM

50th Anniversary

colorful number 50

In 2016, we celebrated the department’s 50thԲԾ

Further Reading

stacks of books

For further readings on the Department history

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