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Stephen Pemberton

New Jersey Institute of Technology
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  •  Publications
    5
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 More details
  • New Jersey Institute of Technology
    Department of History
    Associate Professor
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
History
Medicine
Health Sciences
Sociology of Science
Areas of Interest
History
Medicine
Health Sciences
Sociology of Science
Law
  • All publications (5)
  •  62
    Henri‐Jacques Stiker. A History of Disability. Foreword by David T. Mitchell. Translated by William Sayers. xx + 239 pp., bibl. Originally published in 1982. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1999. $55.50
    Isis 94 (3): 511-511. 2003.
    Disability, MiscHistory of Science, Misc
  •  87
    Biomedicine writ small: The self-vindication of cooperative clinical trials: Peter Keating and Alberto Cambrosio: Cancer on trial: Oncology as a new style of practice. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2012, xviii+456pp, $40 HB (review)
    Metascience 22 (2): 405-408. 2013.
    Medical Ethics
  •  41
    The Genealogy of a Gene: Patents, HIV/AIDS, and Race - by Myles W. Jackson (review)
    Centaurus 57 (4): 261-263. 2015.
  •  88
    Nathaniel Comfort. The Science of Human Perfection: How Genes Became the Heart of American Medicine. xvii + 316 pp., illus., bibl., index. New Haven, Conn./London: Yale University Press, 2012. $35 (review)
    Isis 104 (3): 644-645. 2013.
    Genetics, MiscHistory of BiologyPhilosophy of Medicine, Miscellaneous
  •  55
    Bad Blood and Unsettled Law: Are Healing and Justice Even Possible when Biocapitalism Prevails?
    Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 62 (3): 576-590. 2019.
    Catastrophically bad decisions were an all-too-frequent occurrence when it came to managing blood for therapeutic purposes in the first decade of the AIDS epidemic. The victims of those bad decisions were, first and foremost, the persons who received HIV-contaminated blood via their medical treatments. During the 1980s, at least 20,000 patients in the United States contracted HIV infections via "tainted" blood treatments. More than half of the nation's 16,000 hemophilia patients were among that …Read more
    Catastrophically bad decisions were an all-too-frequent occurrence when it came to managing blood for therapeutic purposes in the first decade of the AIDS epidemic. The victims of those bad decisions were, first and foremost, the persons who received HIV-contaminated blood via their medical treatments. During the 1980s, at least 20,000 patients in the United States contracted HIV infections via "tainted" blood treatments. More than half of the nation's 16,000 hemophilia patients were among that number. Unlike the roughly 12,000 Americans who contracted HIV through a standard whole blood transfusion during that decade, nearly all of these hemophilia patients contracted HIV from a commercially manufactured clotting...
    HistoryLawArts and Humanities, MiscMedicine
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