
Josiah Charles Trent Professor of the History of Medicine
Professor of History
Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine
meh@duke.edu
A specialist in the history of science and medicine, Dr. Humphreys
has focused her research and publications primarily on infectious
disease in the U.S. and the American south, while her current research
explores the history of medicine during the American Civil War. Humphreys
has also published on the history of diabetes, public health ethics,
and colonial medicine. Her research has appeared in Isis,
Bulletin of the History of Medicine, Literature and Medicine, Perspectives
in Biology and Medicine, Social Science and Medicine, Public Health
Reports and Environmental History. Of special note are her books
Yellow Fever and the South (Rutgers University Press, 1992) and
Malaria: Poverty, Race, and Public Health in the United States
(Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001). Her
newest book, Intensely Human: The Health of Black Soldiers in the
American Civil War will appear in fall 2007 from Johns Hopkins
University Press. She is now at work on The Civil War and
American Medicine, also under contract at Johns Hopkins Press.
In addition to her own research, she is currently Editor in Chief
of the Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences.

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