Description of the Humanities and Health Collection
Teachers and medical practitioners have long extolled the benefits of including the humanities in the study of medicine. Similarly, students and residents have long held a deep appreciation for autobiographical or semi-autobiographical works which serve as a realistic introduction to the rigors and realities of the health care world. The importance of literature in medicine has been pointed out by Dr. Rita Charon and her co-authors in describing the additional contributions literature makes to clinical practice (Annals of Internal Medicine 122(1995):599-606). Read the Abstract. Literary accounts of illness can teach healthcare providers concrete and powerful lessons about the lives of sick people. Just as important, great works of fiction about medicine enable those in healthcare to recognize the power and implications of what they do.
The Himmelfarb Library has always selectively acquired books classified in the Literature in Medicine genre. Recognizing the need for these materials, Himmelfarb has worked to build a more formal humanities and health reading collection. Dr. Shelley Bader, Associate Vice President Educational Resources, and her husband Barry S. Bader, regular donors to the Himmelfarb Library, have provided the initial funding for the Humanities and Health collection. The collection is being presented in memory of William M. Auster and Adele Auster Polak, who both suffered through serious illnesses, benefited from advances in science and deeply appreciated those who, in caring for them, remembered the humanity in their clinical practice.

