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Dorothy Hansine Andersen. The Life and Times of the Pioneering Physician-Scientist Who Identified Cystic Fibrosis
Baird, J.
1ª Edición Noviembre 2021
Inglés
Tapa dura
198 pags
600 gr
16 x 24 x 1 cm
ISBN 9783030874834
Editorial SPRINGER
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Introduction
Part I: Life before Babies Hospital
Chapter 1: A beginning
Chapter 2: Orphaned
Chapter 3: College and medical school
Chapter 4: False start
Chapter 5: A reboot
Part II: Babies Hospital during the McIntosh Era
Chapter 6: Historical perspectives
Chapter 7: Synergy
Chapter 8: Andy’s abandoned farm
Chapter 9: Scoring the first goal
Chapter 10: CF firsts
Chapter 11: “To Dr. Andersen who has pulled me through many a tough year”
Chapter 12: McIntosh, pediatric pathology, and Columbia University
Chapter 13: CF sweat and the Matilda Effect
Chapter 14: Glycogen storage diseases
Chapter 15: Celiac disease
Chapter 16: Randomized, controlled trials
Chapter 17: Babies Hospital siblings
Chapter 18: A last decade of CF research
Chapter 19: Pediatric heart diseases
Part III: Beyond Babies Hospital and the McIntosh Era
Chapter 20: Time to enjoy the view
Chapter 21: A foundation and a club for CF
Chapter 22: The end of an era
Chapter 23: Cancer
Afterword
This book chronicles the life and accomplishments of Dorothy Hansine Andersen, a pioneering American pathologist and pediatrician who was the first person to define, diagnose, and treat cystic fibrosis.
Divided into three parts, the book begins by detailing Anderson’s early life, including being orphaned as an adolescent, her college career, and her laborious start in the medical field. Part II then examines Andersen’s role in defining the new disease “cystic fibrosis of the pancreas” and her career of active engagement in various clinical pursuits and research, both in pathology and pediatrics. Chapters in this section also discuss the numerous attempts made by others to minimize Andersen’s work through gender bias and the Matilda Effect. The book concludes by reviewing the foundations laid for CF, Andersen’s legacy, and her terminal illness.
Featuring an engaging narrative style, Dorothy Hansine Andersen is a historically relevant, invaluable text for anyone interested in the life of Dorothy Anderson and the nascence of cystic fibrosis diagnoses.
Contributor Bio(s)
John Scott Baird MD
Columbia University
Department of Pediatrics
Division of Critical Care
New York, NY
USA
Dr. John Scott Baird graduated from the Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons in 1985. He works in New York, NY as well as five other locations and specializes in Adolescent Medicine, Critical Care Medicine, Internal Medicine and Pediatric Critical Care Medicine. Dr. Baird’s current research interests include clinical aspects of critical care medicine, and are focused primarily on understanding and improving the outcome from childhood diseases requiring care in the PICU, particularly pulmonary and renal diseases.
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