Usuaria:Jaluj/Taller/Medicas
Apariencia
< Usuaria:Jaluj · Taller
https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progetto:WikiDonne/Eventi/Collaborazioni/Interwiki_Women/4
Argentina[editar]
- Mabel Bianco https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mabel_Bianco
- Elvira Rawson https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvira_Rawson
- Diana Galimberti https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana_Galimberti
- Primarosa Chieri https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primarosa_Chieri
- Silvia Kochen https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvia_Kochen
- María Teresa Ferrari https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mar%C3%ADa_Teresa_Ferrari
Australia[editar]
- Michele Adair (Class of 1979) – Australian Democrat and independent candidate, consumer and community advocate [1]
- Madelyn Kelman AM (née Lyn Jones) – Chairman of the Queensland Country Women's Association; Member of the Rural Health Advisory Council; Awarded AM for service to Queensland CWA and the community of Emerald[2][3]
US[editar]
- Hydeia Broadbent, HIV activist, [1], [2], [3], [4]
- Myrtle Brooke, educator and mental health pioneer, Alabama Women's Hall of Fame
- Sharon Camp (born 1943), president and CEO of Alan Guttmacher Institute, head of Women's Capital Corporation, which commercialized Plan B, [5]
- Lenna F. Cooper, cofounder of the [Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics] in 1917
- Denise Garibaldi, anti-steroids activist, [6], [7], [8], [9]
- Andrea Ivory, CNN Hero, helps women with breast cancer, [10]
- Elizabeth Maguire (born 1947), first woman director of USAID's Office of Population, CEO of Ipas providing safe abortion in N. Carolina, [11]
- Lee Minto (born 1927), associated with Planned Parenthood, [12]
- Phyllis Tilson Piotrow (b 1933) reproductive health advocate, [13]
Ricerca medica[editar]
- Jewel Plummer Cobb
- Maud Caroline Slye
- Sarah Stewart (ricercatrice) en:Sarah Stewart (cancer researcher)
- Jane Cooke Wright
Australia[editar]
- Dr Kathleen Cuningham – Pioneer of Breast Cancer treatment in Australia[4]
- Professor Susan Dorsch (School Captain, Dux, and winner of the Ex-students prize 1951; Class of 1951) – Emeritus Professor; Pioneer of transplantation immunology. First woman appointed to a Professorship in the faculty of Medicine (USYD). Pro-Vice Chancellor and Deputy Vice-Chancellor at the University of Sydney
- Marie Montgomerie Hamilton (Dux and winner of the Ex-students prize 1908; Class of 1908) – Pioneering pathologist; Hockey player[5]
- Jennifer Byrne genetista e oncologa [14][15][16]
Belgio[editar]
- Berta De Vriese (1877-1958) [17] [18]
- Emma Leclercq (1851-1933) [19][20]
- Marie Louise Compernolle (1909-2005) [21]
Brasile[editar]
- Michelle Lucinda de Oliveira Liver cancers: link between liver resection and metastasis development
Canada[editar]
- Catherine Anderson, studied genetics of pereclampsia, [22]
Cina[editar]
- Jingyi Shi Genetics of acute myeloid leukemia
- Liu Zhihua (medical researcher), cancer research, [23]
Costa d'Avorio[editar]
- Cho N’Din Catherine Boni-Cisse - Characterization of haemophilus influenzae of isolated strains of meningitis
Colombia[editar]
- Lina Gallego, cancer genomics
Cuba[editar]
- Marlein Miranda Cona Development of radiopharmaceuticals to detect and treat malignant tumors
Germany[editar]
- Bettina Schöne-Seifert, medical ethicist
India[editar]
- Ramanathan Sowdhamini, Indian geneticist [24]
Italia[editar]
- Paola Tiberia Zanna Melanogenesis: Expression of the MC1R gene
Giappone[editar]
- Mio Ozawa, nutritional epidemiology
- Barbro Beck-Friis — バルブロ・ベック=フリース (ja)
- Chrystal Heather Ashton — ヘザー・アシュトン (ja)
- Atsuko Takagi, molecular genetics, lipoproteinmetabolism, [25]
- ja:三宅幸子
- ja:三神美和
- ja:伊吹裕子
- ja:冲永寛子
- ja:大野京子
- ja:岡本道雄
- ja:岩崎恵美子
- ja:手塚圭子
- ja:木村昌由美
- ja:水島広子
- ja:江馬蘭斎
- ja:海野けい子 (薬学者)
- ja:田中利恵
- ja:福田千晶
- ja:薬師寺道代
- ja:貫戸朋子
- ja:香川綾
- ja:高橋裕子 (医学者)
Giordania[editar]
- Alia Shatanawi, cardiovascular pharmacology
- Reema Fayez Tayyem Epidemiology of colon cancer: inhibitory effect of curcuma
Mauritania[editar]
- Khadijetou Lekweiry Transmission of malaria in the Nouakchott
Mauritius[editar]
- Fina Kurreeman Study of genes specifically associated with rheumatoid arthritis
- Bhama Ramkhelawon, obesity and diabetes
Messico[editar]
- Berta González Frankenberger speech and voice processing in neonates and premature babies
Mongolia[editar]
- Enkhmaa Davaasambu, maternal health
Nigeria[editar]
- Aisha Abubakar Abdulwahab - Prevalence of tuberculosis in humans and animals in Nigeria
Pakistan[editar]
Perù[editar]
- Cecilia Gonzales-Marin oral infections and medical complications in pregnant women
Serbia[editar]
- vana Pešić identification of urine proteins, renal disease
Singapore[editar]
- Jingmei Li, human genetics
South Africa[editar]
- Nonhlanhla Dlamani African traditional medicine used in the treatment of Kaposi’s sarcoma
Spagna[editar]
- Ana María Briones, cardiovascular disease and hypertension, [26]
- María José Alonso Fernández, pharmacologist, [27]
- Elisa Soriano Fisher, Spanish ophthamlmologist, [28]
- Isabel Weights, Parkinson's disease, [29]
Sudan[editar]
UK[editar]
Professor in Diagnostic Haematology, Department of Medicine, Imperial College Faculty of Medicine, St Mary's Hospital, London. Developed mixed leukocyte culture in the 1960s.
- Moira Whyte FMedSci, Professor of Respiratory Medicine and Head of Department of Infection and Immunity, University of Sheffield[6]
US[editar]
- Linda Burhansstipanov, Native American Cancer researcher (Cherokee) [30], [31], founder of Native American Cancer Initiatives, [32]
- Sandra Burke Ph.D., cardiovascular physiologist, former pre-clinical cardiovascular researcher at Abbott Vascular's Research and Advanced Development; developed drug-coated stent intravascular stents for treatment of restenosis[7] [33]
- Julie Hazel Campbell, vascular medicine [34] [35]
- Wendy Chung -clinical and molecular geneticist who directs the clinical genetics program at Columbia University and currently has a grant from the Children's Cardiomyopathy Foundation to identify new genes for infantile cardiomyopathy.
- Thelma Brumfield Dunn, Virginian pathologist and medical researcher, [37], [38], See this discussion also
- Terri H. Finkel, researcher on autoimmune diseases, Colorado Women's Hall of Fame
- Suzanne T. Ildstad, immunology, transplant research [39]
- Rebecca D. Jackson, medical researcher, Ohio Women's Hall of Fame
- Anna Mitus & Ann Holloway- research developing measles vaccination with Enders. See Science Heroes.
- Lexi Temkin, connections between gulf oil spill and human health, [40], [41]
Neuroscienze[editar]
Argentina[editar]
Francia[editar]
- Aurore Avargues-Weber, cognitive neuroscience
Ungheria[editar]
Polonia[editar]
- Liliana Lubińska (1904–1990), [42], neuroscientist[8]
Tunisia[editar]
UK[editar]
- Jennifer S. Lund, neuroscientist, (b. 1940), [43]
US[editar]
- Lily Jan/Lily Y. Jan, neuroscientist, [44]
- JacSue Kehoe, neuroscientist, [45]
- Lynn T. Landmesser, neuroscientist
Medici, infermieri e ostetriche[editar]
Redlist focusing on women in Nursing
Australia[editar]
- D
- Sue Denison OAM (née Brown) – First Nurse Practitioner in Australia; Awarded an OAM for services to Nursing and the Nundle district[3][9]
- G
- Ethel Godfrey – Victoria's first female dentist[10]
- Ethel Gray – Nursing sister and army matron[11]
- Robyn Guymer – Associate Professor, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Melbourne; Head, Macular Research Unit, Centre for Eye Research Australia; Consultant, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital[12]
- H
- Ida Gertrude Margaret Halley – Medical officer and Feminist; One of the first female medical students at the University of Melbourne[13]
- Dr Margaret Hilda Harper – Pioneering paediatrician, daughter of former PLC principal Rev. Dr Andrew Harper[14]
- Margaret Mary Henderson – Consultant Physician and Consultant Emeritus, Royal Melbourne Hospital (also attended Melbourne Girls Grammar)[15]
- Mary Jermyn Heseltine – One of the first Australian doctors to study exfoliative cytology; Established the first gynaecological cytology unit in Australia at King George V Hospital[16]
- M
- Dame Annie Jean Macnamara – Medical scientist[17]
- Elizabeth Robyn Mason – Director of the Australasian Medical Publishing Company Pty Ltd (also attended The Friends' School, Hobart)[18]
- Winifred Barbara Meredith – Pioneering medical practitioner specialising in child and infant care
- S
- Anna (Nan) Schofield/Anna Schofield – One of the first Australian Army nurses to serve in the Middle East during World War II; Author[19]
- Eleanor Margrethe (Rita) Stang/Eleanor Margrethe Stang – Pioneering medical practitioner[20]
- Alison Mary Street AO – Head, Haemostasis and Haemophilia Units, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne; Honorary Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Pathology and Immunology and Department of Medicine, Monash University, Alfred Hospital[21]
- W
- Barbara Skeete Workman – Professor of Geriatric Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University and Southern Health at Kingston Centre Campus[22]
Canada[editar]
- Marian Noel Sherman/Marian Sherman, physician and humanist in Victoria, BC. [46], [47]
Germany[editar]
- Annette Grüters-Kieslich, endocrinologist and dean of Charité hospital
Ghana[editar]
- Beatrice Wiafe Addai, breast cancer specialist, founded Breast Care International, [48]
Iran[editar]
- Minoo Mohraz, (born 1946) AIDS specialist, [49]
Nigeria[editar]
- Grace Ebun Delano (born 1935), nurse-midwife, active in women's reproductive health initiatives, winner of 1993 World Health Organization Sasakawa Prize.
Panama[editar]
- Cynthia Guy, [50], founder of Instituto de Implantes Cocleares, [51]
- your redlink here
Sweden[editar]
- Christina Lindholm - internationally acclaimed professor of Clinical Nursing and world leading expert on wound healing. Currently senior professor of Sophiahemmet University in Sweden, former Director of Research at the Karolinska University Hospital. [52]
Switzerland[editar]
- Barbara Borsinger - fr:Barbara Borsinger Nurse and founder of Pouponnière de l’Œuvre des Amis de l’Enfance
- Marguerite Champendal - fr:Marguerite Champendal, doctor, first woman to get doctorate at the University of Geneva in 1900
UK[editar]
- Una Coales - NHS GP, past Secretary of Conservative Health, National Council Representative for the Royal College of General Practitioners (2009-12, 2013-16) and runner-up for President of that college in 2009, British Medical Association sessional GP subcommittee representative (2013-2016), Channel 4 TV presenter of the Turn Back Your Body Series (2006), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in ENT surgery and in general surgery (by exam 1999, 2000 respectively), Fellow of the Royal College of General Practitioners (2010), highly commended author BMA 2005 and 2006 and author of 17 books on medical topics for both doctors and the public
- Dame Tina Lavender, Professor of Midwifery at the University of Manchester[23]
- your redlink here
US[editar]
- A
- Elaine Abraham, (born 1929), first registered nurse from the Tingit people, Alaska Women's Hall of Fame.
- B
- Arne Beltz, (1917–2013), public health nurse, Alaska Women's Hall of Fame.
- Ruth Robertson Berrey, Alabama Women's Hall of Fame (1906–1973), physician
- Bertha Bouroncle, M.D. - Hematologist; died August 16, 2013; Significantly advanced the understanding of Hairy Cell Leukemia while also developing its first treatment; First woman chief resident and the first female full professor of Medicine in Ohio; Distinguished professor at The Ohio State University (OSU); Graduate of San Marcos Medical School in Peru, Oldest university in the Americas; [24] [25] [26]
- Louie Croft Boyd, helped found the Colorado State Trained Nurses association, Colorado Women's Hall of Fame
- Sara N. Brown, physician and first female alumna trustee of Howard University
- C
- Judith Craven, physician and medical field educator, Texas Women's Hall of Fame, [53]
- D
- Maude C. Davison, (1885-1956) Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army) Army Nurse Corps Chief Nurse who led the Angels of Bataan, largest group of American women taken as POWs. [54], [55]
- G
- Catalina Garcia, anesthesiologist and community leader in Dallas.[27]
- J
- Janet Jennings (1842-1917), known as "the Angel of the Seneca" for her heroic works as a nurse during the Spanish-American War, [56]
- M
- Gladys Nichols Milton, advocate for midwives to be recognized as medical practitioners, Florida Women's Hall of Fame
- N
- Josephine Nesbit (1894-1993) Army Nurse Corps 2nd in command of the Angels of Bataan, largest group of American women taken as POWs. Credited with the nurses' survival. [57], [58], [59], [60], [61]
- Barbara Nichols (nurse), (born 1939), first African American president of the Wisconsin Nursing association and the American Nursing association, [62]
- Christiane Northrup (req. 2009-02-15) - American author and speaker; obstetrician and gynecologist; M.D. , Dartmouth College (1975); wrote The Wisdom of Menopause (revised, 2006) and Happiness in the Second Half of Your Life (2007); speaker on issues involving women's health and sexuality; [63]
- O
- Salaria Kee O'Reilly, (1913-1991), African American nurse, [64]
- S
- Sonja Eva Singletary, devoted her life to helping women with breast cancer, Texas Women's Hall of Fame, [65]
- Margaret Charles Smith, (1906-1004), noted African American midwife, Alabama Women's Hall of Fame
- Gladys Pumariega Soler (1930-1993), pediatrician, Florida Women's Hall of Fame
- U
- V
- Bertha VanHoosen, physician and founder of American Medical Women's Association in 1915.
- W
- Laura Ross Wolcott (1834-1915), first woman physician in Wisconsin [70]
- Christine Wu (scientist), professor of pediatric dentistry.
- add your link here
Note[editar]
- ↑ Alafaci, Annette (6 de diciembre de 2005). «Adair, Michele (c. 1961 - )». Australian Women Biographical Entry. Consultado el 1 de agosto de 2007.
- ↑ «Ms Lyn Kelman». Rural Health Advisory Council Member Profiles. Queensland Health. Archivado desde el original el 1 de septiembre de 2007. Consultado el 18 de febrero de 2008.
- ↑ a b Gregory, Elizabeth (2008). Congratulations. PLC Sydney Ex-Students' Union Newsletter. Croydon: Presbyterian Ladies' College Ex-Students' Union. p. 1..
- ↑ Chenevix-Trench, Georgia (2004). «Who was Kathleen Cuningham?» (PDF). KConFab (East Melbourne: Kathleen Cuningham Foundation CONsortium for research into FAmilial Breast Cancer, publicado el May 2004). p. 6. Consultado el 1 de agosto de 2007..
- ↑ Stell, Marion K (1996). «Hamilton, Marie Montgomerie (1891 - 1955)». Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. p. 366. Consultado el 1 de agosto de 2007.
- ↑ «Biography of Moira Whyte».
- ↑ Phillips, Bruce E. (Sep–Oct 2005). «Science Spectrum Trailblazers: Top Minorities in Research Science 2005». Science Spectrum (Vol. 2, No. 1). Career Communications Group. p. 40. Consultado el 28 April 2013.
- ↑ Niemierko, Stella (1991). «In Memory of Liliana Lubinska». Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis 51: 3-6.
- ↑ «Sue Denison, Hanging Rock NSW». Daring to Dream: Stories from inspirational rural women. Rural Women's Network. March 2005. Consultado el 1 de agosto de 2007.
- ↑ Presbyterian Ladies' College, Melbourne: The History of our College(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ↑ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Gray, Ethel (1876–1962)(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ↑ Suzannah Pearce, ed. (17 de noviembre de 2006). «GUYMER Robyn». Who's Who in Australia Live!. North Melbourne, Vic: Crown Content Pty Ltd.
- ↑ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Halley, Ida Gertrude Margaret (1867–1939)(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ↑ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Harper, Margaret Hilda (1879–1964)(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ↑ Suzannah Pearce, ed. (17 de noviembre de 2006). «HENDERSON Margaret Mary». Who's Who in Australia Live!. North Melbourne, Victoria: Crown Content Pty Ltd.
- ↑ Royal Australasian College of Physicians- College Roll: Heseltine, Mary Jermyn (accessed:28-06-2007)
- ↑ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Macnamara, Dame Annie Jean (1899–1968)(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ↑ Suzannah Pearce, ed. (17 de noviembre de 2006). «MASON (Robyn) Elizabeth Robyn». Who's Who in Australia Live!. North Melbourne, Vic: Crown Content Pty Ltd.
- ↑ The Age, 21/05/07: "Attended war wounded then lived full life"(accessed:14-08-2007)
- ↑ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Stang, Eleanor Margrethe (1894–1978)(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ↑ Suzannah Pearce, ed. (2007). «STREET Alison Mary». Who's Who in Australia Live!. North Melbourne, Vic: Crown Content Pty Ltd.
- ↑ Suzannah Pearce, ed. (17 de noviembre de 2006). «WORKMAN Barbara Skeete». Who's Who in Australia Live!. North Melbourne, Vic: Crown Content Pty Ltd.
- ↑ http://www.manchester.ac.uk/research/Tina.lavender/
- ↑ https://www.hairycellleukemia.org/about-hcl/history-of-hcl/
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairy_cell_leukemia
- ↑ http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nytimes/obituary.aspx?pid=166615538
- ↑ Young, Michael E. (7 July 2008). «Dream of Becoming a Doctor Undeterred for Catalina Garcia». Dallas Morning News. Consultado el 23 February 2016 – via EBSCO. (requiere suscripción).