Consumptive Chic: When Tuberculosis was the Height of Fashion
During the late 18th century the physical effects of tuberculosis became the ideals of beauty for the fashionable woman.
During the late 18th century the physical effects of tuberculosis became the ideals of beauty for the fashionable woman.
In the fashionable female circles of 18th-century Paris, a physician who recommended fresh air, exercise and looser corsets became a celebrated figure.
The pain of war had at least one positive side-effect: medical advances in haematology.
The legacy of Marie Skłodowska Curie, the world's most famous female physicist, is assured, but in her lifetime she was a controversial figure.
The medical advice in Bald’s Leechbook outlasted the language in which it was written.
The stethoscope revolutionised medicine, but it also provoked anxieties about the unfamiliar sounds it revealed.
The Hydra, a magazine produced by shell shock patients, was pioneering as a mental health care treatment.
Since it was founded in 1948, the issue of how Britons have laughed with – or at – the NHS reveals much about changes in society.
The Civil Wars of the 17th century prompted pioneering medical care and welfare, provided by the state not just for soldiers but for the widows and children they left behind, as Eric Gruber von Arni and Andrew Hopper show.
The belief that a king’s laying on of hands could cure the disfiguring disease of scrofula gained new heights of popularity during the Restoration, as Stephen Brogan explains.