Hansen’s disease, also called leprosy, is treatable today—and that’s partly thanks to a curious tree and the work of a pioneering young scientist Alice Ball in the 1920s. She laid fundamental groundwork for the first effective leprosy treatment globally. But her legacy still prompts conversations about the marginalization of women and people of color in science today.
Author: Mark M. Lambert
Mark M. Lambert is an assistant professor of behavioral medicine, medical humanities and bioethics at Des Moines University.