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Clara Louise Maass was born in East Orange, New Jersey, to German immigrants Hedwig and Robert Maass. She was the oldest of ten children in a devout Lutheran family. [3] Clara's family was impoverished and to help alleviate the financial burden of one child on her family, she went to work as a "mother's helper" for a local woman while finishing high school after her family had failed in the ...
Clara Maass Medical Center is a 342- bed hospital in Belleville, Essex County, New Jersey, United States, that is part of the RWJBarnabas Health system. [1] It was founded in 1868 as the Newark German Hospital, and was renamed in 1952 in honor of Clara Maass, a former nurse who trained there at the hospital's Christina Trefz Training School for Nurses, and become the hospital's head nurse.
13 Florence Nightingale, 1910; Clara Maass, 1901; renewers of society (Commemoration) W – ELCA; 14 Maximilian Kolbe, 1941; Kaj Munk, 1944; martyrs (Commemoration) R – ELCA; 15 Assumption of Mary (W) (modern:Mary, Mother of Our Lord)< [6] Mary, Mother of Our Lord. 16 Isaac, patriarch (Commemoration) W – LCMS
The system later expanded to include Clara Maass Medical Center in Belleville, West Hudson Hospital in Kearny and Wayne General Hospital. [4] However, Wayne General Hospital subsequently changed to affiliate with another organization (Saint Joseph's Healthcare System), Irvington General Hospital was later owned by City of Irvington , [ 5 ] and ...
Clara Maass (1876–1901), devout nurse who died after volunteering in an immunization experiment, listed on the Lutheran Calendar of Saints Ellen G. White (1827-1915), co-founder and prophetess of the Seventh-day Adventist Church , a large Protestant movement present in over 200 countries and territories.
Clara Maass Medical Center is a 469-bed teaching hospital that is part of the Barnabas Health system, founded in 1868 as Newark German Hospital, and named for Clara Maass, a nurse who died after volunteering for medical experiments to study yellow fever [128]
Clara Louise Maass (1876-1901) 1976: volunteer in medical experiments for yellow fever [10] Mary Eliza Mahoney (1845-1926) 1976: first African American professional nurse in the U.S. [11] Mary Adelaide Nutting (1858-1948) 1976: the first nurse appointed as a university professor [12] Sophia French Palmer (1853-1920) 1976
A United States nurse named Clara Maass and two Spanish immigrants were among those who died as a result of their research participation. [ 6 ] Researchers mark the research of the Yellow Fever Commission as the origin of the model of modern consent in medical research.