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Apgar Score - Causes, Symptoms, Treatment of Apgar Score diseases-condition.com | Apgar Score: Causes, Symptoms, Treatment of Apgar Score health-fitness-club.info | Virginia Beach Chiropractor, Virginia Beach Virginia: Atlantic coast vbchiro.com |
Virginia Apgar (June 7, 1909 – August 7, 1974) was an American physician who specialised in anesthesia. She was a leader in the fields of anesthesiology and teratology, and effectively founded the field of neonatology. To the public, however, she is best known as the developer of the Apgar test, a method of assessing the health of newborn babies that has drastically reduced infant mortality over the world.
[edit] BiographyShe graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1929, and the Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons in 1933. She completed a residency in surgery at Columbia in 1937. However, she was discouraged from practicing surgery by Dr. Allen Whipple, the chair of surgery at Columbia. She further trained in anesthesia and returned to Columbia in 1938 as director of the newly formed division of anesthesia.[1] In 1949, Apgar became the first woman to become a full professor at Columbia P&S [2], while she also did clinical and research work at the affiliated Sloane Hospital for Women.[3] In 1959, she earned a Master of Public Health degree from the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. In 1953, she introduced the first test, called the Apgar score, to assess the health of newborn babies. It is administered one minute and five minutes after birth, and sometimes also at 10 minutes. While Apgar was frequently the "first woman" or "only woman" in a department, to serve in a position, or win an accolade, she avoided the organized women's movement, proclaiming that "women are liberated from the time they leave the womb".[4] Apgar never married, and died on August 7, 1974, at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. [edit] Published work
[edit] Recognition and awards
Apgar has continued to earn posthumous recognition for her contributions and achievements. In 1994, she was commemorated on a U.S. postal stamp. In November 1995 she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, New York. [edit] References
[edit] More information
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Categories: American medical researchers | American physicians | Anesthesiologists | American pediatricians | People in the history of medicine | 1909 births | 1974 deaths | Women physicians | Mount Holyoke College alumni | Columbia Medical School alumni | People from Union County, New Jersey | Johns Hopkins University alumni | |||||||||||
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