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

MUSEUM BLOG

The Story of Tommy Douglas and Hospital Insurance
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The Story of Tommy Douglas and Hospital Insurance

ommy Douglas implemented the Hospital Services Plan which made hospital services free and available to all. It was the first health care plan of its kind in Canada. This plan inspired the federal government to create one that helped fund hospital-operating costs and diagnostic services all throughout Canada.

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Globe and Mail: How lessons from the past can help shape future health outcomes
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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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What Do You Mean Museums Aren’t Forever? The Whats and Whys of Deaccessioning
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What Do You Mean Museums Aren’t Forever? The Whats and Whys of Deaccessioning

Deaccessioning is the formal removal of an item from a museum’s permanent collection. The important thing to know about deaccessioning is that it’s mostly about paperwork and about status. An item can be deaccessioned without moving from its spot on a shelf. Physical removal of the item is a different and related process, called disposal (disposal in this case doesn’t translate to “garbage,” it just means putting the object somewhere else). We can deaccession items and not dispose of them, but a museum should never dispose of an item without deaccessioning it.

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Dr. Hercules Sanche and the Gas-Pipe Fraud
History of Healthcare, Students, Interns and ..., Tell Me a Story Tuesday Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Healthcare, Students, Interns and ..., Tell Me a Story Tuesday Canadian Museum of Health Care

Dr. Hercules Sanche and the Gas-Pipe Fraud

One of America's most notorious quacks, Dr. Sanche apparently moved around a lot, keeping one step ahead of the authorities. Dr. Hercules Sanche was an itinerant businessman who pretended to be a doctor. He used this scheme to sell to people a type of product known as the Oxydonor Victor

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The Story of Dr. Kenneth Fenwick and His Complex Legacy
History of Healthcare, Students, Interns and ..., Tell Me a Story Tuesday Canadian Museum of Health Care History of Healthcare, Students, Interns and ..., Tell Me a Story Tuesday Canadian Museum of Health Care

The Story of Dr. Kenneth Fenwick and His Complex Legacy

Today, we’re looking at a story that may not be as inspiring as many that could be told. It is an important story nonetheless. This is the story of Dr. Kenneth Neander Fenwick (1852-1896), and the women from whom he sought to deprive a medical education.

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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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