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Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.

William H. Welch and William T. Sedgwick, two of the founding fathers of American public health, were both early generation "Hopkins Men." Sedgwick was part of the first group of graduate students to attend Johns Hopkins University, and Welch was part of the initial faculty at the Universi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Benson, K. R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2579023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11049162
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author Benson, K. R.
author_facet Benson, K. R.
author_sort Benson, K. R.
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description William H. Welch and William T. Sedgwick, two of the founding fathers of American public health, were both early generation "Hopkins Men." Sedgwick was part of the first group of graduate students to attend Johns Hopkins University, and Welch was part of the initial faculty at the University's medical school. While they never worked together as colleagues at Hopkins, both became interested in the exciting new discoveries of the microbial nature of human disease and developed similar public health programs based on this information. Sedgwick expanded upon these investigations in the new sanitary science program at MIT, where academic public health first emerged in the United States following Sedgwick's appointment in 1883. Welch, who had been exposed to European research in microbiology, promoted microbial research in pathology in Baltimore in 1884. His laboratory-based investigations expanded until they led to the formation of the country's first school of public health in 1916. Thus, a "Hopkins Model" for hygiene and public health emerged from the efforts of both Welch and Sedgwick.
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spelling pubmed-25790232008-11-05 Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene. Benson, K. R. Yale J Biol Med Research Article William H. Welch and William T. Sedgwick, two of the founding fathers of American public health, were both early generation "Hopkins Men." Sedgwick was part of the first group of graduate students to attend Johns Hopkins University, and Welch was part of the initial faculty at the University's medical school. While they never worked together as colleagues at Hopkins, both became interested in the exciting new discoveries of the microbial nature of human disease and developed similar public health programs based on this information. Sedgwick expanded upon these investigations in the new sanitary science program at MIT, where academic public health first emerged in the United States following Sedgwick's appointment in 1883. Welch, who had been exposed to European research in microbiology, promoted microbial research in pathology in Baltimore in 1884. His laboratory-based investigations expanded until they led to the formation of the country's first school of public health in 1916. Thus, a "Hopkins Model" for hygiene and public health emerged from the efforts of both Welch and Sedgwick. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1999 /pmc/articles/PMC2579023/ /pubmed/11049162 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Benson, K. R.
Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.
title Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.
title_full Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.
title_fullStr Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.
title_full_unstemmed Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.
title_short Welch, Sedgwick, and the Hopkins model of hygiene.
title_sort welch, sedgwick, and the hopkins model of hygiene.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2579023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11049162
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