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  2. History of ME/CFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_ME/CFS

    Royal Free disease was named after the historically significant outbreak in 1955 at the Royal Free Hospital used as an informal synonym for "benign myalgic encephalomyelitis". [7] Tapanui flu was a term commonly used in New Zealand, deriving from the name of a town, Tapanui, where numerous people had the syndrome. [74]

  3. Melvin Ramsay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melvin_Ramsay

    Ramsay worked in the Royal Free Hospital in 1955 when an unknown infection affecting 300 staff raged between July and November, which required the hospital to close down. [4] [5] The disease, initially dubbed the Royal Free Disease, was renamed benign myalgic encephalomyelits in a Lancet article the following year.

  4. Royal Free Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Free_Hospital

    The Royal Free Hospital (also known as the Royal Free) is a major teaching hospital in the Hampstead area of the London Borough of Camden.The hospital is part of the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, which also runs services at Barnet Hospital, Chase Farm Hospital, North Middlesex University Hospital and a number of other sites.

  5. Royal Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Hospital

    Royal Free Hospital, a teaching hospital in Hampstead, founded in 1828, given royal patronage by Queen Victoria in 1837, and moving to Pond Street in the 1970s Royal Hospital Chelsea , a retirement home and nursing home for British soldiers, the 'Chelsea Pensioners', founded by King Charles II in 1681

  6. Sheila Sherlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheila_Sherlock

    The liver unit that she set up at the Royal Free Hospital became the centre for both research into liver disease and the education of trainees in the specialty. In 1966, she developed, with Deborah Doniach of the Middlesex Hospital, the standard test for Primary Biliary Cirrhosis [15] and later showed that it was an autoimmune disease.

  7. John Cronin (British politician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cronin_(British...

    Cronin wanted to join the Royal Navy, but his father decided he was to have a career in medicine, and sent him to St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College. He became a Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1939, and received a Bachelor of Medicine and a Bachelor of Surgery in 1940. He was the Resident Surgeon at Grimsby and District ...

  8. Charity Taylor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charity_Taylor

    Taylor was born May Doris Charity Clifford in 1914 in Woking and studied medicine at the Royal Free Hospital. She was appointed assistant medical officer at Holloway Prison in 1942, later becoming medical officer, before becoming governor in 1945. [2] In 1955 she was governor during the imprisonment and hanging of Ruth Ellis. [2]

  9. United Hospitals Athletics Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Hospitals_Athletics...

    University College Hospital Medical School 1834-1987 Royal Free Hospital Medical School ... 1955 London 1956 Guy's 1957 Guy's 1958 Guy's 1959 St Mary's 1960