New to the MHL!

We haven’t done a round-up of the latest items to hit our collection in awhile, so lets see what we have…

And there’s many, many more! See the full date-sorted list here!

Exciting news: SECOND summer 2023 fellowship!

We weren’t sure if we would have the funding to support a second fellowship but we do and we’re excited to see the applications!

The Medical Heritage Library (MHL) seeks a fellow to develop and organize the planning of the MHL’s Biennial Conference. Collaborating with the MHL President, the MHL Project Co-ordinator, and/or the MHL Governance group, the fellow will help plan a virtual conference to take place on November 3, 2023. The fellow will develop a suite of content to support the theme of this year’s conference, which will focus on LGBTQ+ health care. The fellow will help develop the program of the  conference, draft the Call for Papers, help create themes, help identify and recruit speakers, work on outreach, logistics, and organization, and create a program for the conference. The fellow will also liaise with MHL partners, including the DPLA and Internet Archive, for possible programming or publicity. Working with our Co-ordinator, the fellow will launch a social media campaign for the conference. 

The fellowship is paid and may be taken for course credit.

The fellowship is a remote position.

DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:

  • Develop and help implement a  virtual conference. 
  • Coordinate communications around the MHL conference. 
  • Liaise with MHL partners for possible programming or publicity. 
  • Participate in creating and implementing social media promotions and campaigns.
  • Other duties as assigned.

QUALIFICATIONS AND EXPERIENCE:

This position is open to all qualified graduate students with a strong interest in medical or health history, with additional interests in library/information science or education. Strong communication and collaboration skills are a must. Fellows are expected to learn quickly and work independently. Experience planning online programs, conferences, events, or webinars is preferred.  

FELLOWSHIP DURATION:

The fellowship will take place anytime between July 2023 – October 2023.

HOURS:

150 hours, over 17 weeks with a maximum of 20 hours in any given week.

SALARY:

$20/hour not to exceed $3000

To apply, please provide the following:

    Cover letter documenting interest in position

    Curriculum Vitae

    2 References

Please submit your application materials by Monday, March 27, 2023 to the attention of the Fellowship committee at medicalheritage@gmail.com

Apply to be our 2023 Education Resources Fellow!

We’re accepting applications for our summer 2023 fellowship!

The Medical Heritage Library seeks a motivated fellow to assist in the continuing development of our education and outreach programs. Under the guidance of a member of our governance board, the fellow will develop a curated collection or sets for the MHL website on the topic of mental health and illness. Examples of existing primary source sets can be found on the MHL website: http://www.medicalheritage.org/resource-sets/. These collections will be drawn from the over 300,000 items in our Internet Archive library. The curated collections provide a means for our visitors to discover the richness of MHL materials on a variety of topics relevant to the history of health and the health sciences. As part of this work, the fellow may have an opportunity to enrich metadata in MHL records in Internet Archive to support scholarship and inquiry on this topic.
This paid fellowship will be hosted virtually, with no in-person component.

DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:

  • Based on the input of MHL members and others, work on the creation of curated sets of materials drawn from MHL collections.
  • Enrich MHL metadata to highlight underrepresented topics in our Internet Archive collections.
  • Regularly create blog posts and other type of social media for posting to MHL accounts.
  • Other duties as assigned.

QUALIFICATIONS AND EXPERIENCE:
This virtual position is open to all qualified graduate students with a strong interest in medical or health history, with additional interests in library/information science or education. Strong communication and collaboration skills a must. Fellows are expected to learn quickly and work independently.


FELLOWSHIP DURATION:
The fellowship will take place anytime between the end of May 2023-mid-August 2023

HOURS:
150 hours, over 12 weeks with a maximum of 20 hours in any given week.

SALARY:
$20/hour not to exceed $3000

NUMBER OF AVAILABLE FELLOWSHIPS: 1
To apply, please provide the following:
Cover letter documenting interest in position
Curriculum Vitae
2 References- names (with positions) and emails and phone numbers of references to contact.
No letters required.
Please submit your application materials by March 27 th , 2023 through this form.
Candidate interviews will take place virtually. Please contact the MHL at mhltreasurer@gmail.com if you have questions.

Join the MHL!

The MHL is looking for new partners. Do you have material in your collections related to the history of medicine and the health sciences? Is it already in Internet Archive or do you have it digitally available elsewhere and want to put it in IA? Want to make your material part of a large and heavily used online corpus? Come talk to us!

From Our Partners: Postdoctoral Fellowship with UCSF-JHU Opioid Industry Documents Archive

The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is looking for a Postdoctoral Fellow (1 year duration, with potential for renewal for up to 3 years) to assist with research development and community engagement within the recently launched University of California-Johns Hopkins University (UCSF-JHU) Opioid Industry Documents Archive. Fellowships typically start July 1, 2023 but dates are flexible.

The UCSF-JHU Opioid Industry Documents Archive (OIDA) https://www.industrydocuments.ucsf.edu/opioids/, established in Spring 2021, is a digital collection of publicly disclosed opioid litigation materials. The Archive contains emails, memos, presentations, sales reports, training materials, budgets, audit reports, meeting agendas and minutes, expert witness reports, and depositions of pharmaceutical industry executives. The Archive provides a freely accessible digital resource for use by researchers, journalists, policymakers, and the public. The Archive provides an unparalleled opportunity to investigate scientific, legal, regulatory, and marketing questions, and apply computational as well as other diverse analytic methods, to generate fundamental new knowledge about the origins of the epidemic, and to inform changes to policies and practice to prevent future harms.

The UCSF OIDA Postdoctoral Fellow will pursue original, publishable research using materials housed in OIDA and work closely with the archive research team to enhance the accessibility and usability of archival materials for a diverse array of communities, with a particular focus on racial and health equity. The fellows will take a leadership role in developing an effective organizational structure of the large volume of diverse materials housed in OIDA to facilitate a wide range of multi-disciplinary research endeavors. Fellows will work on a multidisciplinary team including faculty, other postdoctoral fellows and research assistants. Fellows will be mentored by and work closely with researchers and information specialists leading this work at UCSF. Fellows will be based at the UCSF Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education (https://tobacco.ucsf.edu/) and participate fully in the fellowship program. Fellows will also be affiliated with the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the UCSF School of Medicine (https://humsci.ucsf.edu/).

Qualifications
Fellows should be well-versed in the history and social context of the ongoing harms associated with opioids —which has become known as the “opioid overdose epidemic” in the US, and/or be knowledgeable about research in related areas, such as the history, regulation, and impact of the pharmaceutical, tobacco, or food industries; agnotology; and the commercial determinants of health. We especially welcome applicants with training in social inequities, racism, perspectives on intersecting identities and society, and political economy. Scholars with relevant prior publications and/or dissertation research are encouraged to apply. Fellows should also be familiar with methods in digital and computational humanities, and means of using digital platforms to build research communities and enhance dissemination and engagement. Fellows should be innovative scholars with excellent research, communication, and organizational skills; be comfortable working on multiple projects in a dynamic research setting; and, have interest in helping work with many parties to build an important and accessible field of research.

Applicants with doctoral degrees in areas such as anthropology, sociology, history, history of medicine, information studies, political science, public health, health policy, nursing, American studies, and related fields with experience or interest in the digital humanities are eligible to apply. Dual degree trained scholars and health care providers, and interdisciplinary scholars are welcome.

Application Instructions
Fellowship application: https://tobacco.ucsf.edu/application-process

Questions about this position can be addressed to Kathleen Franklin, kathleen.franklin@ucsf.edu