Close-up of a 1930s iron lung, with text describing its manufacturer.

MUSEUM BLOG

Special Event to Celebrate New Addition

Special Event to Celebrate New Addition

Information about mNRA vaccines, such as that for COVID-19, has been added to mark this important time in medical history. To celebrate the gallery update, the Museum is holding a special event!

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“You wake up soaked”: Mist Tents and Cystic Fibrosis
History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care

“You wake up soaked”: Mist Tents and Cystic Fibrosis

For those living with cystic fibrosis (CF) from the 1960s to mid-1970s, nights called for fog. People with CF would tuck into bed under a plastic canopy filled with a medicated mist, accompanied by one or more whirring compressors nebulizing solution all night long. These “mist tents,” as the devices were known, were considered a mainstay of CF treatment—until, abruptly (and perhaps mercifully), they weren’t.

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2022 Margaret Angus Research Lecture
History of Current Hea..., Programs & Events, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Current Hea..., Programs & Events, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care

2022 Margaret Angus Research Lecture

Anna’s project examines the lived experience of cystic fibrosis (CF) in the latter half of the 20th century as expressed through the healthcare objects associated with its treatment. By tracing the material histories of two fundamental categories of CF-related objects, inhalation therapies and parenteral antibiotics, she evokes the changing routines of everyday life with the illness from the 1940s to 1990s.

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Globe and Mail: How lessons from the past can help shape future health outcomes
History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Museums, news Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Museums, news Canadian Museum of Health Care

Globe and Mail: How lessons from the past can help shape future health outcomes

That’s where the Museum of Health Care aims to make a contribution. “Our objects can tell a million stories, not just about vaccines but also about vaccine hesitancy,” says Ms. McGowan. “A lot of the discussion that was the backlash against the smallpox vaccine, for example, is not that different from what you hear today. It is really interesting to see this continuity.” The question then becomes what lessons we are willing to learn, and Ms. McGowan believes that seeing an iron lung, a smallpox vaccination certificate or a poster about wearing a mask during the 1918-19 influenza epidemic can provide an extra incentive for seeking out valid evidence.

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(IV) Hook-ups: Cystic fibrosis and intravenous antibiotics
History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care

(IV) Hook-ups: Cystic fibrosis and intravenous antibiotics

Antibiotics have been a mainstay of CF treatment throughout the decades. This simple statement, however, obscures their various manifestations in the lives of people with CF. The principles may have been similar in 1950 and 1990, but the experiences were vastly different. Material culture illuminates the changes that textual references can obscure, as exemplified here by the objects of intravenous (IV) antibiotic treatment for CF lung infections.

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The "Stuff" of Cystic Fibrosis
History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Current Hea..., History of Healthcare, Research Fellowship Canadian Museum of Health Care

The "Stuff" of Cystic Fibrosis

Since cystic fibrosis (CF) was identified in 1938, tens of thousands have lived with the severe genetic disease. Each experience has been individual, yet common threads run through, most notably experiences of healthcare. People with CF become well-acquainted with the clinic, the hospital, the pharmacy; the need to accommodate at home piles of pill bottles, physio devices, nebulizer set-ups, perhaps home IVs, feeding tubes, oxygen compressors, insulin. The lived experience of everyday life with CF in a large part resides in these objects and their environments.

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Indigenous History Month: Dr. Cornelia Wieman

Indigenous History Month: Dr. Cornelia Wieman

Dr. Wieman is an Anishinaabe woman from Manitoba, Little Grand Rapids First Nation. She grew up very poor with her adoptive non-Indigenous family as a victim of the Sixties Scoop. She had very little exposure to medicine prior to her entrance into McMaster University.  After graduating from McMaster in 1993 with a medical degree and training in psychiatry, she became laser focused on improving the health and mental health of Indigenous Peoples and fighting Indigenous racism.

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Indigenous History Month: Dr. Oronhyatekha

Indigenous History Month: Dr. Oronhyatekha

Dr. Oronhyatekha, meaning "Burning Sky" or “Burning Cloud”), also known as Peter Martin, a Kanyen'kehà:ka (Mohawk) became one of the first Indigenous persons in Canada to earn a medical degree on May 22, 1867. 

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Indigenous History Month: Dr. Nadine Caron

Indigenous History Month: Dr. Nadine Caron

Today we are celebrating Dr. Nadine Caron who is making medical history! Her story is one of many firsts; she became the first Indigenous woman to graduate from the University of British Columbia’s (UBC) medical school and then, in 2005, became the first female Indigenous general surgeon in Canada. Most recently, Dr. Caron was named the UBC’s founding First Nations Health Authority Chair in Cancer and Wellness.⁠

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