Hogan’s research examines efforts to increase accessibility and participation in American health professions since the 1960s. He draws on professional newsletters and magazines, archival sources, and oral history interviews to explore the evolving ways in which health fields have described and conceptualized marginalization among disabled students and practitioners, as well as those from less elite and geographically underrepresented backgrounds. Amidst recent efforts to increase accessibility and participation for marginalized populations in professional fields, little attention has been given to the strategies, accomplishments, barriers, and shortcomings of past initiatives. Hogan analyzes the ways in which clinical fields’ perceptions and assessments of competence and capability have been used to exclude individuals from less elite and underrepresented backgrounds from careers in medicine and other health-related professions.
Johns Hopkins University Press Disability Dialogues: Advocacy, Science, and Prestige in Postwar Clinical Professions 2022
Johns Hopkins University Press Life Histories of Genetic Disease: Patterns and prevention in postwar medical genetics 2016
Articles
Social Science & Medicine Andrew J Hogan, Accessibility in Health Professions Education: Exclusionary Practices as Barriers to Diversity in American Physical Therapy 341, p. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116519 2024
Bulletin of the History of Medicine Andrew J Hogan, Underrepresented Minority Recruitment: Manpower as Motivator in Late- Twentieth Century Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy 97(4): 614-640, p. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/922709 2023
Bulletin of the History of Medicine “Moving Away from the ‘Medical Model’: The World Health Organization’s classification of disability.” 92, no. 2, p. 241-269 2019
CMAJ “Social and Medical Models of Disability and Mental Health: Evolution and renewal.” 191, no. 1, p. E16-E18 2019
Isis “The ‘Two Cultures’ in Clinical Psychology: Constructing disciplinary divides in the management of mental retardation." 109, no. 4, p. 695-719 2018
Endeavour "From Precaution to Peril: Public Relations Across Forty Years of Genetic Engineering." 40, no. 4, p. 218-222 2016
Social History of Medicine “Medical Eponyms: Patient advocates, professional interests, and the persistence of honorary naming." 29, no. 3, p. 534-556 2016
Studies in the History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences "Making the Most of Uncertainty: Treasuring exceptions in prenatal diagnosis." 57, p. 24-33 2016
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences Hogan, Andrew J. Disrupting Genetic Dogma: Bridging Cytogenetics and Molecular Biology in Fragile X Research 45, p. 174-197 2015
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences “Disrupting Genetic Dogma: Bridging cytogenetics and molecular biology in fragile X research.” 45, no. 1, p. 174-197 2015
Medical History 'The 'Morbid Anatomy' of the Human Genome: Tracing the Observational and Representational Approaches of Postwar Genetics and Biomedicine' The William Bynum Prize Essay 58, no. 3, p. 315-336 2014
New Genetics and Society “Locating Genetic Disease: The impact of clinical nosology on biomedical conceptions of the human genome (1966-1990)." 32, no. 1, p. 78-96 2013
Technology and Culture “Set Adrift in the Prenatal Diagnostic Marketplace: Analyzing the role of users and mediators in the history of a medical technology.” 54, no. 1, p. 62-89 2013
Endeavour “Visualizing Carrier Status: Fragile X syndrome and genetic diagnosis since the 1940s.” 36, no. 2, p. 77-84 2012