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Encyclopedia of Health and Medicine

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Biographies <strong>of</strong> Notable Personalities 415<br />

ered the bacterial cause <strong>of</strong> rabies <strong>and</strong> developed<br />

the first vaccine to prevent the fatal infection in<br />

dogs, the primary source <strong>of</strong> rabies in his time, as<br />

well as in people bitten by rabid dogs.<br />

Pavlov, Ivan (1849–1936) Russian scientist<br />

best known for his research on conditioned<br />

reflexes, in which he trained dogs to expect food<br />

when he rang a bell. Pavlov observed that after a<br />

time the dogs began to salivate when they heard<br />

the bell ring, altering the body’s normal physiologic<br />

response to salivate at the sight <strong>and</strong> smell <strong>of</strong><br />

food. Pavlov also used surgical gastric fistulas in<br />

dogs (operations to create openings into the stomach)<br />

to study the physiology <strong>of</strong> digestion, research<br />

for which he won the 1904 Nobel Prize in Physiology<br />

or <strong>Medicine</strong>.<br />

Piaget, Jean (1896–1980) Swiss psychologist<br />

who developed numerous theories about human<br />

intelligence, the foundation <strong>of</strong> which centered<br />

around his belief <strong>of</strong> intelligence as a process <strong>of</strong><br />

adaptation within genetically defined frameworks.<br />

Piaget defined this process through four stages<br />

beginning at birth <strong>and</strong> culminating in adolescence,<br />

with completion <strong>of</strong> one stage crucial to entering<br />

the next.<br />

Prusiner, Stanley (b. 1942) American neurologist<br />

<strong>and</strong> biochemist who discovered prions, infectious<br />

protein fragments that cause progressive,<br />

degenerative brain diseases such as kuru disease,<br />

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), <strong>and</strong> variant CJD<br />

(vCJD) arising from infection with bovine spongiform<br />

encephalopathy (BSE; commonly called mad<br />

cow disease). Prusiner received the Nobel Prize in<br />

Physiology or <strong>Medicine</strong> in 1997 for his discovery<br />

<strong>and</strong> work in underst<strong>and</strong>ing the infectious mechanisms<br />

<strong>of</strong> prions.<br />

Roëntgen, Wilhelm (1845–1923) German<br />

physicist who discovered X-rays <strong>and</strong> the process<br />

for using them to create images, called<br />

roentgenograms, which revealed internal structures<br />

<strong>of</strong> density such as the bones. Roëntgen<br />

received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or <strong>Medicine</strong><br />

in 1901 for his discoveries.<br />

Sabin, Florence (1871–1953) American physician<br />

who was the first woman to become a full<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor at Johns Hopkins Medical School. Sabin<br />

conducted research that resulted in significant<br />

findings about the structure <strong>of</strong> the brain, fetal<br />

development <strong>of</strong> the lymphatic system, <strong>and</strong> tuberculosis<br />

infection. In the latter years <strong>of</strong> her medical<br />

career Sabin turned her efforts to public health in<br />

her home state <strong>of</strong> Colorado.<br />

Salk, Jonas (1914–1995) American physician<br />

who developed the first polio vaccine, released in<br />

1955 after eight years <strong>of</strong> research. Polio vaccination<br />

has eradicated poliomyelitis, once one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

most debilitating <strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong>ten fatal infections, from<br />

much <strong>of</strong> the world.<br />

Semmelweis, Ignaz Philipp (1818–1861)<br />

Hungarian physician who recognized the connection<br />

between puerperal fever (childbirth fever)<br />

<strong>and</strong> the then-common practice physicians followed<br />

<strong>of</strong> moving between autopsies on women<br />

who died <strong>and</strong> women who had just given birth.<br />

Semmelweis implemented stringent antisepsis<br />

procedures at the hospital where he worked,<br />

requiring physicians to wash their h<strong>and</strong>s with<br />

chlorinated lime before examining patients. As a<br />

result the death rate dropped to nearly zero.<br />

Though the established medical community was<br />

slow to embrace this revolutionary change, antiseptic<br />

h<strong>and</strong> washing eventually became st<strong>and</strong>ard<br />

practice.<br />

Soper, Fred (1893–1977) American epidemiologist<br />

who organized vector-eradication programs<br />

worldwide to eliminate diseases such as malaria,<br />

yellow fever, <strong>and</strong> hookworm infestation.<br />

Taussig, Helen (1898–1986) American pediatrician<br />

<strong>and</strong> cardiologist who worked with heart<br />

surgeon Alfred Blalock <strong>and</strong> surgical researcher<br />

Vivien Thomas to develop an operation to correct<br />

severe congenital defects <strong>of</strong> the heart. The first<br />

such operation, the Blalock-Taussig procedure,<br />

was a shunt that restored the flow <strong>of</strong> blood<br />

through the lungs in defects such as tetralogy <strong>of</strong><br />

Fallot. Taussig overcame a severe hearing loss suffered<br />

in childhood as well as bias that prevented<br />

women from obtaining medical degrees at most<br />

medical schools in the United States.<br />

Thomas, Vivien (1910–1985) African American<br />

researcher who collaborated with heart surgeon<br />

Alfred Blalock <strong>and</strong> pediatrician Helen Taussig<br />

to develop the operative procedures <strong>and</strong> instruments<br />

to correct congenital heart defects. Intending<br />

himself to become a physician, Thomas lost his<br />

savings in the stock market crash <strong>of</strong> 1929 that<br />

ushered in the American Great Depression. By the<br />

time he recovered financially, changing educa-

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