American Decades
People in the News
John Jacob Abel isolated amino acids from blood by vividiffusion in 1913.
In 1911 John F. Anderson and Joseph Goldberger for the first time produced measles in an animal by injecting monkeys with cell-free blood filtrate from a human measles patient, suggesting that measles was a viral infection.
In 1910 John Auer demonstrated the bronchial spasm in acute anaphylaxis, and Samuel J. Meltzer suggested that this reaction characterized bronchial asthma.
Oswald T. Avery and Alphonse Dochez
described the specific soluble substance of pneumococcus in 1917.
S. R. Benedict devised a basal metabolism test in 1918.
Francis Gilman Blake and James Dowling Trask
demonstrated the viral origin of measles in 1919, In 1910 Washington University at Saint Louis president Robert Somers Brookings was inspired by the Flexner Report and...
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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
