Infectious diseases microbiology
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Source: collections.nlm.nih.gov
Video source record: https://collections.nlm.nih.gov/catalog/nlm%3Anlmuid-7602670A-vid
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Summary
| Description | This session, part of the National Library of Medicine's 1976 Colloquium on the Bicentennial of Medicine, features Paul B. Beeson, M.D., Distinguished Physician, Veterans Administration, and Professor of Medicine, University of Washington, providing an historical overview of American scientists' contribution to the field of infectious disease research over the last 200 years. Dr. Beeson divides the time period into three eras, calling the years from 1875 to 1900 the golden age of bacteriology. He addresses at length the work of microbiologist Theobald Smith, as well as the founding of the Rockefeller Institute, whose scientists made significant strides in the field of virology. |
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| Source | collections.nlm.nih.gov |
| Author | Beeson, Paul B. (Paul Bruce), 1908-2006., National Medical Audiovisual Center., National Library of Medicine (U.S.), Colloquium on the Bicentennial of Medicine in the United States, National Institutes of Health, 1976. |
Licensing
Public Domain
Attribution: Beeson, Paul B. (Paul Bruce), 1908-2006., National Medical Audiovisual Center., National Library of Medicine (U.S.), Colloquium on the Bicentennial of Medicine in the United States, National Institutes of Health, 1976.