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1950: Medical advancement: Mass tuberculosis immunization is under way with the BCG vaccine. This vaccine is recommended to be given intradermally, immediately after birth. This vaccine is mandatory to attend school in France between 1950 and 2007, introduced in Brazil in 1967, and to the Philippines in 1979. [40] [47] [48] Tuberculosis: 1952 ...
1590 – Microscope was invented, which played a huge part in medical advancement; 1596 – Li Shizhen publishes Běncǎo Gāngmù or Compendium of Materia Medica; 1603 – Girolamo Fabrici studies leg veins and notices that they have valves which allow blood to flow only toward the heart; 1621 – 1676 – Richard Wiseman [36] [43] [59] [64] [65]
Many early innovations of the Bronze Age were prompted by the increase in trade, and this also applies to the scientific advances of this period. For context, the major civilizations of this period are Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Indus Valley, with Greece rising in importance towards the end of the third millennium BC.
State intervention in medical care: consequences for Britain, France, Sweden, and the United States, 1890-1970 (Cornell UP, 2019). Howard, William Travis. Public health administration and the natural history of disease in Baltimore, Maryland, 1797-1920 (1924) online, Comprehensive scholarly history. Kalisch, Philip Arthur, and Beatrice J. Kalisch.
This is a list of sovereign states in the 1920s, giving an overview of states around the world during the period between 1 January 1920 and 31 December 1929. It contains entries, arranged alphabetically, with information on the status and recognition of their sovereignty .
1900 – Swedish Dr. Stenbeck cures a skin cancer with small doses of radiation [4]; 1920s – Dr. William B. Coley's immunotherapy treatment, regressed tumors in hundreds of cases, the success of Coley's Toxins attracted heavy resistance from his rival and supervisor, Dr. James Ewing, who was an ardent supporter of radiation therapy for cancer.
This is a list of countries ranked by the quality of healthcare, as published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (). [1] The ranking takes into account various health outcomes, including survival rates for seven types of cancer, as well as for strokes and heart attacks.
Contraceptive drugs were developed, which reduced population growth rates in industrialized countries, as well as decreased the taboo of premarital sex throughout many western countries. The development of medical insulin during the 1920s helped raise the life expectancy of diabetics to three times of what it had been earlier.