Subscribe to 51精品视频wire Today
Get the most interesting and important stories from the 51精品视频.Historian Bridges Gap in Understanding Neglected Tropical Diseases
A historian of eastern Africa, Mari Webel teaches popular courses at 51精品视频 such as Disease and Health in Modern Africa and History of Global Health.
And last month, she convened a workshop on Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) that drew the attendance of researchers from around the world, which was the culmination of her through the .
Her next endeavor: extensive training in infectious disease epidemiology, medical parasitology and disease control as 51精品视频鈥檚 first-ever 鈥 one of just 12 in the country.聽
By acquiring a new toolkit of knowledge, she鈥檚 aiming to help change the perceptions of NTDs by engaging directly with researchers in public health and medicine.
NTDs, such as Dengue fever, leprosy and yaws, are often under-studied and mainly afflict the poorest people in the world. According to the they cause illness in more than 1 billion people globally.
鈥淭his experience will allow me to think about the history of NTDs better, differently, with greater sophistication,鈥 said Webel. Ideally, she said the knowledge she gains will allow her to write a new history of the NTDs in global health and, later, to conduct ethnographic work on NTD elimination programs in eastern Africa.
A career of collaboration
Though she鈥檚 an assistant professor in the Department of History, rather than the health sciences, Webel is no stranger to the world of medicine.
She remembers childhood years in southern Illinois making rounds with her father, a nephrologist. Her mother is a nurse.
About the New Directions Fellowship
The is intended to 鈥渁ssist faculty members in the humanities and humanistic social sciences who seek to acquire systematic training outside their own areas of special interest.鈥
Under the fellowship, over the next three years, Webel will enroll in courses and practicums at 51精品视频 and another neighboring institution, in addition to completing two capstone intensive programs. Some of her courses include epidemiology of infectious diseases, biostatistics and medical parasitology.
鈥淭his experience will allow me to think about the history of NTDs better, differently, with greater sophistication,鈥 said Webel. Ideally, she said the knowledge she gains will allow her to write a new history of the NTDs in global health and, later, to conduct ethnographic work on NTD elimination programs in eastern Africa.
The fellowship will also allow Webel to attend annual meetings of the American Society of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the WHO NTD Strategic and Technical Advisory Group to gain a sense of research priorities and how practitioners understand the NTDs as a global health problem.
鈥淐oming from a medical family background, thinking about how people experience health and illness was always an intuitive way for me to think about wider problems in society. I understand doctors鈥 expertise, and I don鈥檛 think they鈥檙e wrong headed,鈥 said Webel. 鈥淏ut, I do know there鈥檚 real room for collaboration.鈥
In the early 2000s, Webel was working at the National Archives in Washington, D.C., after obtaining a master鈥檚 degree concentrating on cultural history.聽
Then, the mosquito-borne West Nile Virus hit Washington, putting the nation鈥檚 capital into somewhat of a panic mode, she said. Webel made a connection to her research.
鈥淚 remember thinking, this is not the first time D.C. had to deal with something like this; parts of D.C. were a malarial swamp in the 19th century. Our amnesia was so stark,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 wanted to find a way to bring the history that I knew to be relevant into modern conversations about West Nile and other vector-borne diseases, so I decided to pursue a PhD focused on the history of tropical medicine.鈥 聽
Webel, who has been at 51精品视频 since 2014, researched historical campaigns against new epidemics of sleeping sickness, a disease also known as human African trypanosomiasis, in eastern Africa 鈥 particularly from the 1890s through World War I. Her forthcoming book, 鈥,鈥 is the result of that work. It explores how African populations shaped disease control interventions.聽
In 2018, Webel applied her interest in multidisciplinary work on a project with colleagues , professor of 51精品视频鈥檚 , and , assistant professor at , to develop a database on NTD research and publication trends.
The goal of their Social Science Research Initiative-funded project is to better understand the rise of global health risks and answer big questions such as where did the idea of a 鈥渘eglected tropical disease鈥 come from, and what purpose has it served? What do the NTDs really mean in terms of research impact and political implications 鈥 and how are big decisions made?
鈥淭he questions she is asking are extraordinarily important for understanding contemporary developments and controversies in a field characterized by an ethos of 鈥榚very disease for itself,鈥欌 said , professor in the Department of Anthropology at Emory University in Atlanta, where Webel completed postdoctoral research.
And in order for Webel to understand the crossover from lab research to policy implementation, to then contribute to global health practice, she had to continue to step outside her field.
鈥淚f I am going to engage with scientists and policymakers about the NTDs, particularly if I am going to have some impact on how they understand diverse problems affecting people in eastern Africa and help integrate historical understandings into current interventions 鈥 it can鈥檛 be 鈥榖lack-boxed鈥 for me anymore,鈥 Webel said.
So, Webel decided to apply for the prestigious New Directions Fellowship, which will allow her to train outside her field of expertise 鈥 and make new collaborations.聽Webel is the first faculty member at 51精品视频 to receive this honor.
鈥淢ari鈥檚 recruitment to our department was so exciting precisely because she brings such a depth of expertise both in African history and in the history of medicine and science,鈥 said , chair of 51精品视频鈥檚 Department of History. 鈥淭hose are two areas where we had seen lots of unmet student demand.鈥
鈥淢y favorite thing about the teaching I do is that I draw students from all across the majors,鈥 Webel said. 鈥淥ur conversations in class are really fascinating explorations of different knowledge bases.鈥