Topics
Podcast
Magazine
Popular Tags
More
To quarantine or not to quarantine? To this day, difficult public health case Typhoid Mary still begs the question.
Modern emergency care finds its roots in the Army of the Potomac.
Lacking a standardized test to assess a baby’s health at birth, anesthesiologist Virginia Apgar created a simple rubric that persists more than a half century later.
In 1966, the anaesthetist-in-chief of Massachusetts General Hospital published a paper that would yield greater protection for clinical trial subjects.
MGH’s clinical research center, opened in 1925, created a model for the NIH to open similar facilities across the country.
A century ago, MGH pathologist Richard Cabot made an event out of physicians identifying illnesses—and greatly improved diagnostic methods as a result.
The city’s first hospital was founded to treat the poor—and serve as a teaching locale for Harvard Medical School.
Thomas Hunt Morgan’s discoveries won him the Nobel Prize and forever altered American Laboratories.
One hundred and fifty years ago, Florence Nightingale opened a school that would revolutionize nursing.
When Paul Ehrlich developed the first clinically tested syphilis treatment in 1910, he sparked hope and controversy.
No Articles Found.
We use cookies and other tools to enhance your experience on our website and to analyze our web traffic. For more information about these cookies and the data collected, please refer to our Privacy Policy.