American Decades
The Revolution in Medical Education
Medical Education.
Once it was easy to become a doctor. During the nineteenth century the United States saw the emergence of an estimated four hundred proprietary medical schools. Set up to offer medical degrees as part of profit-making ventures, these schools generally had low standards of instruction, poor facilities, and admitted anyone who could pay the tuition. Since the proprietary schools competed with so many other for-profit schools as well as schools affiliated with universities, they advertised incentives to get students for their programs. One school gave free trips to Europe upon graduation to any students who regularly paid fees in cash for three years. Anyone who had the money could get a medical degree and practice medicine. In many of the private proprietary schools, degrees were granted after one year of courses that consisted chiefly of listening to lectures.
Flexner's Tour.
At the turn of the...
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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
