Aids Ephemera

A while back I wrote an article about the National Library of Medicine and their exhibit on the “Varieties of Medical Ephemera”. 

LifeSaversTheir “AIDS Ephemera,” is an exhibit which opened November 25, 2002. The materials are drawn from the NLM’s Prints & Photographs collection. The National Library of Medicine has a remarkable collection of posters, pamphlet, buttons – many of which are displayed on the site representing the creative efforts of public health officials to combat the disease.

Although we have missed “World Aids Week” which began on Monday, November 24th, why not stop on over at the National Library of Medicine’s Aids Ephemera Exhibit and have a look.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Click to see my current Bonanzle items

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, Aids Week, Condoms,

Varieties of Medical Ephemera

Women in HealthContinuing my search of the Internet for interesting Ephemera, I ran across a site today hosted by the United States National Institutes of Health.

It references an exhibit that was held at the National Library of Medicine during the summer of 1995.

Entitled “Here Today, Here Tomorrow” and subtitled “Varieties of Medical Ephemera“, it heralds items in the private collection of a Mr. William H. Helfand and on loan to the NLM.

The exhibit was in 9 different areas as follows:

• Addiction • Medicine Show
• Aids • Public Health
• Bookplates • Tuberculosis
• Children • Women  
• Medical Education    

Dodds Pills for WomenThe one that originally caught the eye of my search engine was Women… but each of the sections has true merit.

The Women’s exhibit reads:

Images of women have always been featured in product advertisements, and large collections of medical ephemera could be built on this theme alone.

Perhaps the one that caught my eye the most was the one for “Dodd’s Female Pills”, and advertisement in the Drane and Company’s price list, and dated around 1900.

These magic pills were recommended for a variety of irregularities including “headache, pain in the back or limbs, faintness, sickness, giddiness, languer, constipation, flushing of heat, palpitation, indigestion, change of life, swollen limbs and all other irregularities.

Now where might we find some of those pills today… surely there are a number of folks out there who could be cured of a lot of misery, with just a few of Jefferson Dodd’s pills.  For more info visit the Hospital or Women in Soho Square, London.

You can see this exhibit as well as the other eight by visiting the United States National Institute of Health site.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Click to see my current Bonanzle items

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, Medical Ephemera, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health

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Site last updated December 11, 2011