Articles
“Plural Medicine, Medical Expertise, and Public Health in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Mexico” [十九世纪和二十世纪墨西哥的多元医学、医学专业知识和公共卫生]. China Journal of the Social History of Medicine and Health VI, 2 (December 2021), 122-147. [Link]
“Breaking the Boundaries of Professional Regulation: Medical Licensing and Foreign Influence in the Consolidation of Homeopathy in Mexico”, História, Ciência, Saúde, Manguinhos 26, 4 (2019), 1243-1262. [Link]
“Medicine ‘for Mexicans’: Medical Popularization, Commercial Endeavors, and Patients’ Choice in the Mexican Medical Marketplace, 1853-1872”, Medical History, 61, 4, (October, 2017): 568-589. [Link]
Book chapters
“Healers and Doctors: A History of the Healing Professions in Mexico,” in Healthcare in Latin America: History, Society, and Culture edited by David S. Dalton and Douglas J. Weatherford, p. 19-39. University of Florida Press, 2022. [Link]
“An Undesirable Past: Free Medical Schools and the First Doctors of the Mexican Revolution, 1910-1945,” in Transforming Medical Education: Historical Case Studies of Teaching, Learning, and Belonging in Medicine edited by Delia Gavrus and Susan Lamb, 208-232. Montreal, Quebec: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2022. [Link]
“Mystic of Medicine, Modern Curandero, and “Médico improvisado”: Francisco I. Madero and the Practice of Homeopathy in Rural Mexico at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.” In The Gray Zones of Medicine: Healers and History in Latin America edited by Diego Armus and Pablo F. Gómez, 89-107. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2021. [Link]
Book Reviews
“Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo by Jennifer Koshatka Seman.” Bulletin for the History of Medicine 97, 1 (2023): 162-3. [Link]
“Mestizo Modernity: Race, Technology, and the Body in Postrevolutionary Mexico by David S. Dalton.” Technology and Culture 62, no. 4 (2021): 1268-69. [Link]
Sloan, Kathryn A. Death in the City: Suicide and the Social Imaginary in Modern Mexico. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2017, 257pp. Review by Jethro Hernandez Berrones for H-LatAm (https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=50971). February, 2018
Translations
Palmero, Arturo, “Free School of Obstetrics and Nursing of Mexico: Goals, Bylaws, Rules, Study Plans, and Programs,” transcribed and translated by Jethro Hernández Berrones, in HOSLAC: History of Science in Latin America and the Caribbean. Advanced Topic: Reproductive Histories ed. Julia E. Rodriguez. [Link]
Ceniceros, Tomasa, Clementina Brito, and Natalia Torres Meneses, “Three Clinical Histories (1929-1931) from the Free School of Obstetrics and Nursing of Mexico,” transcribed and translated by Jethro Hernández Berrones, in HOSLAC: History of Science in Latin America and the Caribbean. Advanced Topic: Reproductive Histories ed. Julia E. Rodriguez. [Link]
Perea, Manuel, Manuel Morán Calderón, and Ester Chapa, “Report from the Secretariat of Public Education on the Free School of Obstetrics and Nursing of Mexico (1936),” transcribed and translated by Jethro Hernández Berrones, in HOSLAC: History of Science in Latin America and the Caribbean. Advanced Topic: Reproductive Histories ed. Julia E. Rodriguez. [Link]
Digital Publications and Projects
“Williamson County Science Building.” Online exhibit. Supervision and edition of students’ work.
“History of Science at Southwestern University.” Online exhibit (supervised and edited students’ work).
“A Recipe for the Body: Chiropractic Medicine in Mexico (Part II),” The Recipes Project, December 12, 2019, https://recipes.hypotheses.org/16107
“A Recipe for the Body: Chiropractic Medicine in Mexico (Part I),” The Recipes Project, December 18, 2019, https://recipes.hypotheses.org/16087
“A visit to the Battle Creek Sanitarium (1914)” on Digital Texas Heritage Resource Center, Southwestern University Special Collections and Archives. [Link]