American Decades
Goldberger, Joseph B. 1874-1929
THE PELLAGRA DETECTIVE
The Microbe Hunter.
Joseph Goldberger was a Hungarian who immigrated to the United States with his family at the age of seven. They lived in the East Side of Manhattan and ran a grocery store where Joseph worked as a delivery boy. A bright student, he entered the City College of New York at age sixteen. Goldberger first planned to become a civil engineer, but two years after he dropped in on a lecture at Bellevue Hospital Medical College, he changed his mind and decided to become a doctor. After graduating from Bellevue Hospital Medical College in 1895, he had a private practice until he joined the United States Public Health Service in 1899. For the next fourteen years he was a microbe hunter, fighting yellow fever, dengue fever, typhus, and typhoid in the United States and Mexico. His most important battle, however, remained ahead.
A Mysterious Malady.
The disease pellagra was...
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1910's Medicine and Health
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Great Influenza Epidemic of 1918-1919
- The Growth of Group Practice
- Health Insurance
- Improving Hospitals
- Medicine in World War I
- Nurses in World War I
- Preventive Medicine and Public Health
- Psychological Testing in the Military
- Regulating Medicine
- The Revolution in Medical Education
- Surgery
- Technological and Medical Research Advances
- The War on Tuberculosis
- What Could We Do about Cancer in 1913?
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Headline Makers
- Goldberger, Joseph B. 1874-1929
- Kendall, Edward Calvin 1886-1972
- Mayo, William James 1861-1939 and Mayo, Charles Horace 1865-1939
- Meyer, Adolf 1866-1950
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt 1866-1945
- Sanger, Margaret 1879-1966
- Terman, Lewis Madison 1877-1956
- Vaughan, Victor Clarence 1851-1929
- Wald, Lillian D. 1867-1940
- Welch, William Henry 1850-1934
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1910–1919
