Lynn M. Thomas
· Historian of politics and gender in East and Southern AfricaUniversity of Washington · History
Active 1979–2026
About
Lynn M. Thomas is a Professor and the Giovanni and Amne Costigan Endowed Professor in History at the University of Washington. She serves as the Director of the Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities. Her research focuses on areas within history, and she is involved in academic leadership within the department. Further details about her specific research interests, background, and key contributions are not provided on the page.
Research topics
- Gender studies
- Sociology
- Political science
- Medicine
- History
Selected publications
Traveling Histories of Abortion
The American Historical Review · 2026-01-10
article1st authorCorrespondingThe American Historical Review · 2026-01-10
article1st authorCorrespondingManaging the Sudden Critical Shortage of Intravenous Fluids
NEJM Catalyst · 2025-04-16
articleSSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
preprintOpen accessResuscitation Plus · 2024-08-23 · 7 citations
articleOpen accessBackground: Early cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation is key to increasing survival following an out-of-hospital-cardiac-arrest (OHCA). However, automated external defibrillators (AEDs) are used in a very small percentage of cases. Despite large numbers of AEDs in the community, the absence of a unified system for registering their locations across the UK's ambulance services may have resulted in missed opportunities to save lives. Therefore, representatives from the resuscitation community worked alongside ambulance services to develop a single repository for data on the location of AEDs in the UK. Methods: A national defibrillator network, "The Circuit", was developed by the British Heart Foundation in collaboration with the Association of Ambulance Chief Executives, the UK ambulance services, the Resuscitation Council UK and St John Ambulance. The database allows individuals or organisations to record information about AED location, accessibility, and availability. The database synchronises with ambulance computer aided dispatch systems to provide UK ambulance services with real-time information on the nearest, available AED. Results: The Circuit was successfully rolled out to all 14 UK ambulance services. Since 2019, 82,108 AEDs have been registered. Of the AED data collected by The Circuit, 54% were not previously registered to any ambulance service, and are therefore new registrations. Conclusion: The Circuit provides ambulance services with a single point of access to AED locations in the UK. Since the launch of the system the number of defibrillators registered has doubled. Linking the Circuit data with patient outcome data will help understand whether improving the accessibility to AEDs is associated with increased survival.
Resuscitation on the field of play: a best-practice guideline from Resuscitation Council UK
British Journal of Sports Medicine · 2024-08-08 · 16 citations
articleOpen accessSudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is the leading cause of sudden death in athletes during high-level, organised sport. Patient-related and event-related factors provide an opportunity for rapid intervention and the potential for high survival rates. The aim of this consensus was to develop a best-practice guideline for dedicated field-of-play medical teams responding to SCA during an organised sporting event. A task-and-finish group from Resuscitation Council UK identified a stakeholder group of relevant experts and cardiac arrest survivors in March and April 2022. Together, they developed a best-practice guideline using the best available evidence. A public consultation period further refined the guideline before it was finalised in December 2023. Any sudden collapse, without rapid recovery during sporting activity, should be considered an SCA until proven otherwise. Field-of-play medical teams should be empowered to access the collapsed athlete as soon as possible and perform initial essential interventions in situ. This includes a suggested minimum of three cycles of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation in persistent shockable rhythms while other aspects of advanced life support are initiated. There should be careful organisation and practice of the medical response, including plans to transport athletes to dedicated facilities for definitive medical care. This best-practice guideline complements, rather than supersedes, existing resuscitation guidelines. It provides a clear approach to how to best treat an athlete with SCA and how to organise the medical response so treatments are delivered effectively and optimise outcomes.
Case support for compression-only CPR: St. John Ambulance
International Journal of First Aid Education · 2021-08-23
articleOpen accessIntroduction: Health, Healing and Caring
Gender & History · 2021-10-01
articleSenior authorThere’s a complex history of skin lighteners in Africa and beyond
2020-03-05
preprint1st authorCorresponding4 Beauty Queens and Consumer Capitalism
2020-09-09
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding
Frequent coauthors
- 4 shared
Bernard Foëx
University of Edinburgh
- 4 shared
James Dodd
MRC Epidemiology Unit
- 4 shared
Robert Parker
University of Cape Town
- 3 shared
Uta G. Poiger
- 3 shared
Tani E. Barlow
Rice University
- 3 shared
Gavin D. Perkins
- 3 shared
Priti Ramamurthy
National Geophysical Research Institute
- 3 shared
Alys Eve Weinbaum
University of Washington
Labs
Lynn M. Thomas LabPI
Awards & honors
- Watson Foundation
- Social Science Research Council
- U.S. Department of Education (Fulbright)
- Woodrow Wilson Foundation
- National Endowment for the Humanities
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