Month: May 2012

Starling Loving Hall

Originally built as the new Homeopathic Hospital in 1917, the building became a new hospital for the medical school after an addition in 1924 made it operational. The building was renamed Starling-Loving University Hospital in 1923 in honor of Mr. Lyne Starling (1784-1848), a founder of Columbus and benefactor of Starling Medical College and Dr. Starling Loving (1827-1911), dean of Starling Medical College (1880-1905).

By 1926, with the addition of three wings, the hospital housed 296 beds, an operating amphitheater, laboratories, a maternity department and an outpatient clinic. The main purpose was clinical teaching.

When The Ohio State University Hospital was built in the 1950′s, all hospital practices moved into it. Starling Loving University Hospital was renamed Starling Loving Hall on July 14, 1961. It no longer serves as a hospital facility but rather houses offices and classrooms. The original building has had 5 additions over the years.

The top of the building also features six gargoyles: rabbit, cow, monkey, pelican, cat and horse.

Upham Hall

Upham Hall was built in 1951. It was a reinforced concrete frame with brick exterior.  It consisted of a basement with four floors and a penthouse. The building had two additions. It was located where the OSU Harding Hospital and the Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute now stand on 12th ave. Upham Hall was used for psychiatric care. It was demolished in 1998.

John Howell Janeway Upham (1871-1960) received his BS (1891) and MD (1894) from the University of Pennsylvania. He was a professor at Starling Medical College (1897-1899), Ohio Medical University (1900-1902), Starling-Ohio Medical College (1907-1914), and Ohio State (1914-1941). He served as Dean of the OSU College of Medicine from 1928-1941.

2012 Annual James V. Warren Memorial Lecture

2012 Annual James V. Warren Memorial Lecture
Featuring
Diane L. Gorgas, MD
“Reflections from Haiti: A View from the Ground”

Haiti is a country torn by war, poverty and natural disaster. Dr. Gorgas will discuss her experiences in delivering medical care in this challenging setting along with some of the future directions for international health initiatives in the country.

Dr. Gorgas came to The Ohio State University in 1994 and has acted as Associate Residency Director and subsequently Residency Director for the Department of Emergency Medicine. She serves as an Associate Professor within the College of Medicine and works clinically in the Emergency Department at Ohio State’s Wexner Medical Center. She has written about her global health interests and challenges in a monthly column she authors in the Columbus Dispatch.

Her lecture will accompany the national traveling exhibit, Against the Odds: Making a Difference in Global Health, that will be on display at the Medical Heritage Center from May 7 through June 16, 2012. The exhibition is brought to you by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health and is free and open to the public.

Thursday, May 17, 2012
Reception at 4:30 pm; Lecture at 5 pm
OSU Health Sciences Library Medical Heritage Center (5th Floor)
Prior Hall | 376 West 10th Avenue, Columbus, OH
The Wexner Medical Center at The Ohio State University
FREE and open to the public
Parking: We suggest parking in the SAFEAUTO Hospitals Garage. Please visit http://medicalcenter.osu.edu/pdfs/maps/finding_prkng_pad.pdf for maps and parking information. Visit go.osu.edu/mhc or call (614) 292-9966 for event information.

Against the Odds: Making a Difference in Global Health Exhibit at the MHC

The Medical Heritage Center, in partnership with the Health Sciences Center for Global Health, is hosting the exhibit Against the Odds: Making a Difference in Global Health. The exhibit will run from May 7 through June 16, 2012. This exhibit is brought to you by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, and the following is taken from the National Library of Medicine press release.

Against the Odds: Making a Difference in Global Health is a banner traveling exhibition highlighting the role of communities in improving health at home and all around the world. The exhibition explores the shared basic needs required for a good quality of life, including nutritious food and clean water, a safe place to live, and affordable health care.

Using historical and contemporary photographs, the banners tell stories of collaboration between families, scientists, advocates, governments, and international organizations, all taking up the challenge to prevent disease and improve medical care. The journey begins in Pholela, South Africa, where husband and wife team Sidney and Emily Kark developed a holistic approach to community health. Traveling on, the exhibition showcases the work of the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee to teach mothers across the country Oral Rehydration Therapy, a lifesaving treatment for childhood diarrhea.

Other destinations include Brazil, where the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST), or Landless Workers’ Movement is empowering poor citizens to begin subsistence farming on land left idle by agricultural corporations, and Central America, where the Pan American Health Organization launched Health as a Bridge to Peace to put an end to conflict and rebuild health care services.

As well as recent developments, the exhibition also focuses on historic campaigns that have changed today’s attitudes. The role of activists in the United States during the early years of the AIDS epidemic, for example, includes the work of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) and the battles of Ryan White, the teenager who fought to attend school after contracting HIV through a blood transfusion.

This exhibition raises awareness of the sources and effects of health inequalities and invites each of us to join the global campaign for health and human rights. The experiences described constitute a legacy of success, often based on the simplest means. The exhibit’s message is, working together, we can make a world of difference.