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	<title>Sheppard Pratt &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>The City That Cures: Baltimore&#8217;s Countless Contributions to Modern Medicine</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/health/baltimore-historical-healthcare-contributions-inventions-that-shaped-modern-medicine/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Dec 2024 18:00:28 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Health & Wellness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore medical advancements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore medical history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GBMC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MedStar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mercy Medical Center]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[modern medicine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mt. Washington Pediatric Hospital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sheppard Pratt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The City That Cures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Johns Hopkins Hospital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[University of Maryland Medical Center]]></category>
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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Health & Wellness</h6>
<h1 class="title">The City That Cures</h1>
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From the automatic defibrillator to the first public medical school in the United States, we celebrate the countless contributions Baltimore has made to modern medicine.
</h4>



<h4 class="text-center" style="padding-top:2rem;">By Jane Marion and Christianna McCausland</h4>

<h6 class="text-center">Illustrations by Alicia Corman</h6>


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<p>
hen Harford County-born John Archer
graduated from the inaugural class
of Philadelphia’s medical school
(which later became the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine)
on June 21, 1768, he became the first
person in the 13 Colonies to earn a
diploma from a medical college. That
distinction was purely by dint of his
last name—diplomas were given out in alphabetical order.
Regardless, it was a red-letter day for the entire graduating
class.</p>
<p> From the minutes written by the Board of Trustees it
was declared: “This day may be considered as the Birthday
of medical honors in America.”
</p>
<p>
After graduation, Archer returned home to practice in
Bel Air. But back then medicine was hardly the prestigious
occupation it is today. Even with his medical degree, Archer
practiced what many would now consider folk medicine.
Reportedly making his rounds on horses slung with
saddlebags packed with medical equipment, he favored
early practices like bleeding a patient to rid the body of
bad spirits and treating smallbox with purging. A popular
saying coined by Colonial historian William Smith was that
“quacks abound like locusts in Egypt,” and it was just as
likely that doctors would maim—or even murder—their
patients than heal them. In fact, staying home was often
considered safer than heading to the hospital.</p>
<p> In 1799, the
Medical & Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland (now <a href="https://www.medchi.org/">MedChi</a>,
The Maryland State Medical Society) was founded by a
group of concerned physicians “to prevent the citizens [of
Maryland] from risking their lives in the hands of ignorant
practitioners or pretenders to the healing art.”
</p>
<p>
From these humble beginnings, The College of Medicine
of Maryland (later the University of Maryland School of
Medicine) was founded in 1807. It was the nation’s first
public medical school and helped Baltimore establish itself
as not only a medical town, but a place that would lay the
foundation for the future of modern medicine. Into this
burgeoning era of medical professionalism hospitals came,
went, and even merged. In 1874, six Sisters of Mercy came to
Baltimore to take charge of the Baltimore City Hospital health
dispensary, a merger between the College of Physicians and
Surgeons and the Washington Medical College. The hospital was renamed Mercy Hospital in 1909 and became the
Mercy Medical Center we know today in 1988.
</p>
<p>
When The Johns Hopkins Hospital opened in 1893,
it pushed the frontier further, helping to establish and
improve standards for the profession and ensuring that
all doctors were properly trained. William Osler, one of
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine’s “Big Four” founding
professors, invented Grand Rounds in 1889, giving
students the opportunity to tag along with seasoned
physicians as they performed their hospital rounds. And
standards of care, including the idea of formal medical
residency for specialty training, was instituted and is now
the norm in most training hospitals.
</p>
<p> 
The seed of this story was planted when we received
a pitch about the history of Medstar Union Memorial’s
Curtis National Hand Center, the largest hand center
in the world—sending us on a quest to identify other
advancements and achievements. It turns out there are
more medical milestones in our city and surrounding
counties than we could count.</p>
<p> We studied historical
timeline walls at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. We visited
the rare book library at MedChi and the Gibson Museum
at Sheppard Pratt. We held the first surgical rubber
glove at The Johns Hopkins Hospital (now embedded in
plexiglass) and paged through Samuel Mudd’s dissertation
on dysentery at the University of Maryland. (If your history
is rusty, Mudd was the one given a life sentence for aiding
John Wilkes Booth after the assassination of Abraham
Lincoln.) We made a field trip to the oldest continuously
operating medical school classroom in the country
(Davidge Hall). And debated over what should land on our
list not wanting to leave anything—or anyone—out.</p>
<p> And
while we think this list represents an impressive array of
medical innovations and innovators, the reality is that
we’ve just skimmed the surface.
</p>
<p>
So much of global medical practice that now seems
standard was born in Baltimore. We’ve come a long way
since Archer was paid by his
patients in pork and cords of
wood. Thanks to all the people listed below, Baltimore continues
to lead the way for medical
innovation in the 21st century.
</p>


<h6 class="captionVideo thin text-center"><i>Above</i>: JOHNS HOPKINS HOSPITAL FOUNDING PROFESSOR WILLIAM OSLER (SEATED) EXAMINES A PATIENT. —COURTESY OF THE ALAN MASON CHESNEY MEDICAL
ARCHIVES OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS</h6>

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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">1.</span> <span class="freight">Occupational Therapy Starts Here</span></h4>
<p>
Sheppard Pratt is the birthplace of modern occupational therapy, a type of treatment
founded by William Rush Dunton Jr. Dunton believed that participation in daily activities,
including hobbies and sports, had a therapeutic effect on people struggling with
mental illness. The asylum included a building that drew patients from their rooms for
pastimes such as bowling, billiards, and basket-weaving, and patients were often tasked
with tending to the instituition's gardens and grounds. “Occupation,” wrote Dunton in
1928, “is as necessary as food and drink.” OT is still widely used as a treatment tool. 
</p>

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<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF SHEPPARD PRATT</h6>
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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">2.</span> <span class="aptly">The Blue Baby Operation Saves Lives</span></h4>
<p>
Helen Taussig is considered the founder of pediatric
cardiology in 1944 and is known for her trailblazing
work on “blue baby syndrome.” Along with her
Hopkins colleagues, surgeon Alfred Blalock and
surgical technician Vivien Thomas, Taussig developed
a transformative operation to correct the congenital
heart defect that prevents the heart from receiving
enough oxygen, resulting in the baby turning “blue.”</p>
<p>
Since its inception, the operation known as the Blalock-Thomas-Taussig shunt has saved countless lives and
ushered in a new era of cardiac surgery that led to the
advancement of open-heart surgery in adults.</p>
<p> Hearing-impaired
from childhood, Taussig’s innovative work
has been attributed to her ability to detect the rhythms
of the heart through touch rather than sound. “Learn
to listen with your fingers,” she once famously said.
</p>

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<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF JOHNS HOPKINS/PROVIDED BY THE KARSH ESTATE / © YOUSUF KARSH, 1975</h6>
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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly">3.</span> <span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">In 2018, a team of nine plastic surgeons and two urologists performed the world’s first total penis and scrotum transplant at The Johns Hopkins Hospital on a veteran injured by an explosive device in Afghanistan.</span></h4>



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font-weight: 400;
font-style: normal;"><span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">4.</span> <span class="aptly">A Treatment for Rabies</span></h4>
<p>
In 1897, Charles Henry Stewart became
the first patient in Maryland to receive
a life-saving rabies vaccine. Stewart, a
Prince George’s County resident who
was bitten by a rabid English setter, was
treated at the City Hospital, now Mercy
Medical Center, at its Pasteur clinic.
Named for the French microbiologist
Louis Pasteur, who created the rabies
vaccine in 1885, it was only the third
such clinic in the United States.
</p>

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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">5.</span> <span class="freight"> What Is...Sinai Hospital?</span></h4>
<p>
Sinai Hospital physicians Drs. Michel Mirowski
and Morton Mower had an unusual idea:
Create a battery-operated defibrillator so
small it could be implanted in people with
arrhythmia and provide a life-saving jolt
whenever necessary, rather than waiting to
get to an external paddle defibrillator at an
emergency room. After years of innovation,
Mirowski and Morton’s automatic implantable
cardioverter-defibrillator, which was about the
size of a deck of cards, was implanted in a
human at Johns Hopkins Hospital in 1980. The
device is credited with saving many lives. In
2019, Mirowksi, Mower, and their invention
appeared as clue on <i>Jeopardy</i>!
</p>

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<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="freight">6.</span> <span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">William Halsted Invents, Well, Everything</span></h4>
<p>
William Stewart Halsted
was a founding physician at
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
and the first chief of surgery.
He was considered one of the
most influential surgeons
in the U.S. Along with
Department of Medicine
chief William Osler, he
introduced a formal multitier
surgical residency
program in 1889 in which
students and recent
graduates of the new medical
school trained—and lived—at
the hospital (hence, the term “residents”). At that time,
they had to be unmarried. The program, whose motto
was, in Halsted’s words, “See one, do one, teach one,”
is the model for modern residency training. Halsted’s
other accomplishments include perfecting the radical
mastectomy (90 percent of breast cancer patients in the
U.S. received the procedure until the 1970s). Halsted
was also an anesthesia pioneer, though his work led to
lifelong addiction issues after experimenting with using
cocaine as an anesthetic. Additionally, he invented the
idea of using surgical gloves to protect his favorite scrub
nurse (and later wife). Gloves were soon serendipitously
found to protect patients from infection.
</p>

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<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF THE ALAN MASON CHESNEY MEDICAL ARCHIVES OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS</h6>
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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span style="color:#c05225;" class="aptly">7.</span> <span class="freight">An Historical Heart Transplant</span></h4>
<p>
In December 2021, Bartley Griffith, MD, and Muhammad
Mohiuddin, MBBS, of University of Maryland Medicine
asked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for an
emergency provision to conduct a xenotransplant of a
genetically modified pig’s heart into a human patient.
Much to their surprise, the request was granted. In
January, 57-year-old David Bennett, a Maryland resident
with terminal heart disease, became the first person to
successfully receive this form of transplant.</p>
<p> Although pig
heart valves have been used in humans for years, the
concept of whole-heart transplants was largely abandoned
after the death in the 1980s of “Baby Fae.” The difference
with this procedure is that changes could be made to the
pig’s complex genome to reduce the likelihood of organ
rejection. Bennett, who was severely medically
compromised prior to surgery, died two months after the
procedure. But for the nearly 110,000 Americans waiting
for an organ transplant, his story brings hope for a new
era in transplant surgery.
</p>

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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#c05225; padding-top:1rem;">Planes, Trains, Automobiles, Spaceships</h4>

<p>
Dramamine was being
tested as a treatment for
allergies at Johns Hopkins
Hospital in 1947, when a
woman who had broken
out into hives found that
taking the antihistamine
also cured her chronic
motion sickness. Since
then, the drug has staved
off nausea for people on the
go—and even been taken
to outer space as a cure for
space motion sickness.
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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#c05225; padding-top:1rem;">Organs Take Flight</h4>

<p>
For the first time ever, an
unmanned drone delivered
an organ to University of
Maryland Medical Center in
2019, potentially changing
the speed and efficiency with
which donor organs can now
be dispersed. The kidney was
successfully transplanted
into a 44-year-old patient.
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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#c05225; padding-top:1rem;">Tooting Their Own Horn</h4>

<p>
In the 1880s, the Sisters
of Mercy managed to book
John Philip Sousa (the Taylor
Swift of his time) to play
a fundraiser for their new
hospital. The concert netted a
whopping $20,000—over half
a million in today’s dollars.
</p>

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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#c05225; padding-top:1rem;">A Hospital for Everyone</h4>

<p>
In the 19th century,
Baltimore’s Jewish population
faced antisemitism at area
hospitals. Jewish doctors were
excluded from instruction and
employment and Jewish patients
struggled to receive equitable
care. Undaunted, Baltimore’s
Jewish citizens rallied to open
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore in
1866 to serve anyone regardless
of age, race, or gender.
</p>

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<h4  style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">8.</span> <span class="freight"> Facing the Future</span></h4>
<p>
In 2012, a team of plastic, reconstructive,
and maxillofacial surgeons, along
with over 150 nurses and support
staff, completed the world’s most comprehensive
full-face transplant. Although the year prior a
face transplant was completed at Boston’s
Brigham and Women’s Hospital, the transplant at
R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center included
the jaw, teeth, and tongue as well as all the muscles
needed for the recipient to both feel and use
his new face.
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<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF THE ALAN MASON CHESNEY MEDICAL ARCHIVES OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS</h6>

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<h4 style="padding-top:1.5rem;"><span class="freight">9.</span> <span style="color:#c05225;" class="freight">The electronic defibrillator is invented by <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/health/johns-hopkins-electrical-engineer-william-kouwenhoven-cpr-aed-defibrillator/">William Kouwenhoven</a> and his team at JHU in 1957 leading to another breakthrough: modern-day CPR.</span></h4>
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<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">10.</span> <span class="freight">Landmark
Hand Surgery</span></h4>
<p>
In 2016, the Curtis National Hand Center
performed the first-of-its-kind surgery in
the U.S. for radial club hand. The patient, a
7-year-old boy, was born with a shortened
forearm, a bent hand, and no thumb.
Surgeons used bones, a joint, a toe, and
growth plates from the patient’s foot to
form a functioning right arm and thumb,
and to construct a full-length radius to
restore the child’s forearm. Today, the boy,
now a teen, is continuing to grow and has
improved dexterity in his fingers and
hand function that he wouldn’t otherwise
have had without the surgery.
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<h6 class="captionPic thin text-center">—COURTESY OF THE ALAN MASON CHESNEY MEDICAL ARCHIVES OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS</h6>

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<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">11.</span> <span class="aptly">Rounds and Residencies</span></h4>
<p>
In the late 19th century, Sir William Osler, the first physician-in-chief at
the Johns Hopkins Department of Medicine, forever changed the course
of medical training when he devised the concept of “rounds.” At that
time, medical school education consisted of classes in basic science and
lectures in which a physician examined patients in an amphitheater
while students looked on. It was Osler who moved the mentoring to the
hospital wards (which were then octagonal) where visits to the patient’s
bedside with a team of physicians—known as “rounding”—became a
critical component of clinical training. This allowed aspiring doctors to
learn from physicians, patients—and each other. (Osler once famously
said that he hoped his tombstone would read: “He brought medical
students into the wards for bedside teaching.”)</p>
<p> On the days that Osler,
known for his encyclopedic knowledge, arrived unannounced to test the
residents’ understanding, the sessions were dubbed “grand rounds.” The
legendary physician also instituted the idea of a medical “residency”
(along with colleague William Halsted) in which staff physicians lived in
the administration building of the hospital, often for many years. To this
day, rounds and residencies are an essential part of medical training at
teaching hospitals.
</p>

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<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">12.</span> <span class="aptly">Safety Cap Changes Baseball</span></h4>
<p>
Johns Hopkins neurosurgeon (and avid baseball fan) Walter
Dandy, along with orthopedic surgeon George Bennett (see below), is credited with developing a cap to protect batters from
“bean balls”—a pitch thrown directly at a batter’s head. The
invention—a plastic protective shield
that slides into a zippered pocket of
a baseball cap—was inspired by a
jockey’s helmet and commissioned
by Brooklyn Dodgers’ general
manager Larry MacPhail, who’d
witnessed a few too many injuries
on the job.</p>
<p> It was invented in 1940
and first donned the following year
by future Hall of Famers Joe Medwick
and Pee Wee Reese—both of whom
had suffered injuries—during Dodgers’ Spring Training in a game against the
Cleveland Indians. It became the prototype for the modern baseball batter’s helmet.
When the game was over, MacPhail told the media that they had just witnessed “the
biggest thing that has happened to the game since night baseball.” By 1971, all players
were required to wear batting helmets and the national pastime was changed forever.
</p>

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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/NOV_Top-Doctors_hat.jpg"/>

<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF THE ALAN MASON CHESNEY MEDICAL ARCHIVES OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS / WALTER DANDY PAPERS, C.1941</h6>
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">GEORGE BENNETT</h4>
<p>
If you ever suffered a shoulder
injury playing baseball
and received treatment, you
may want to thank the memory
of orthopedic pioneer
George Bennett. Bennett
trained at University of Maryland
School of Medicine
(graduating in 1908) and
went to work at Johns Hopkins
University. Although he
had many orthopedic
achievements, he is best
known as the father of sports
medicine, not surprising
given his own love of athletics.
(He played semi-pro baseball
as a teen.) Bennett garnered
a national reputation
and treated world famous
athletes including Joe DiMaggio.
At the time, he was one
of a very few physicians to
make a correlation between
sports and medicine.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">JOHN SHAW BILLINGS</h4>
<p>
John Shaw Billings, a
battlefield surgeon during the Civil War, made many
contributions to The
Johns Hopkins Hospital
and medical school, including
overseeing the
planning and 11-year construction
of the hospital
and integrating teaching
and research at the institution.
After supervising
the dismantling of dozens
of military hospitals during
the war, Billings became
a leading expert on
hospital construction in
the U.S. But his most important
contribution was
the indexing, storage, and
retrieval of information at
the Office of the Surgeon
General in Washington,
D.C., which laid the
groundwork for the <a href="https://www.nlm.nih.gov/">National
Library of Medicine</a>.
Under Billing’s directorship,
it became the
largest and most complete
library of medical literature
in the world.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">RUDIGER BREITENECKER</h4>
<p>
It’s not an overstatement
to say that Breitenecker
changed the landscape for
how rape victims are treated
in Maryland. A pathologist
who studied in his
native Vienna, he was the
assistant state medical examiner until he joined
GBMC Healthcare in 1967.
Breitenecker was appalled
by how rape victims were
treated and in 1975 he
founded the Rape Care Center
at GBMC, now its Sexual
Assault Forensic Evidence
(<a href="https://www.gbmc.org/services/safe-and-dv-program/">SAFE</a>) Program. He ensured
women did not wait
hours to be seen and that
they were given compassionate
care. Most notably,
he made rape kits more
uniform and kept DNA samples
from cases, believing
that someday the technology
would exist to analyze
those samples to identify
perpetrators. He was correct.
The more than 2,000
samples he preserved have
been used to exonerate the
innocent and prosecute the
guilty and the SAFE program
he created is considered
one of the most notable
in the country.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">ANGELA BRODIE</h4>
<p>
Angela Brodie not only
opened the door to a new
way to treat breast cancer,
she built the door from
scratch where no one even
felt a door needed to exist.
The British-born scientist,
who spent 37 years at the
University of Maryland School of Medicine, pioneered
the research that
led to the creation of the
first selective aromatase
inhibitor, Formestane, to
treat breast cancer. But
when she was in the early
stages of research, she
struggled to get backing.
Knowing her science was
sound, she took matters
into her own hands, using
materials donated by a
supply house and working
with several post-doctoral
students to synthesize the
aromatase compound herself.
“One needs to be tenacious
if you think what
you’re doing is going to
work,” she said in a 2006
interview with <i>Baltimore</i>.
Her research is the basis of
a class of drugs that prevents
the recurrence of
breast cancer in postmenopausal
women. While most
of the cancer survivors
who are alive today thanks
to Brodie’s efforts would
not even recognize her
name, in the world of science,
the physician, who
died in 2017, is a star.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">CAROL GREIDER</h4>
<p>
In 1984, molecular biologist
Carol Greider discovered
telomerase, an enzyme that is critical for
the health and survival of
all living organisms found
at the end of chromosome
strands (known as telomeres).
Greider found
that when telomeres are
too short or too long, they
contribute to disease. Her
research now focuses on
discovering how to keep
the cells the right length
to maintain chromosomes
and mitigate disease. Her
finding has deepened our
understanding of cancer,
lung, and bone marrow
conditions, and other
age-related diseases. Greider,
now director of the
<a href="https://mbg.jhmi.edu/">Department of Molecular
Biology and Genetics at
the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine</a>,
won the 2009 Nobel Prize
in Physiology or Medicine
for her work.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">ALAN GUTTMACHER</h4>
<p>
Alan Guttmacher was a
pioneer and international
leader in reproductive
rights. While practicing as
an ob-gyn at The Johns
Hopkins Hospital, he
observed a disparity in
fertility rates among his
patients with different
socioeconomic backgrounds.
One of his findings
was that women who
lacked access to private
physicians also lacked
access to contraceptive
information and services.
In 1933, he published the
first of a controversial
series of books which
gave ordinary citizens access to information
about pregnancy, delivery,
contraception, abortion,
and infertility. Guttmacher,
who later served as president
of Planned Parenthood,
joined the birth
control movement and
promoted family planning,
which he called, “an
urgent, democratic form
of medicine.”
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">JANET HARDY</h4>
<p>
Janet Hardy, a pediatrics
professor at The Johns
Hopkins Hospital, led a
landmark study that provided
information on teen
pregnancy and medical
and social issues. In 1957,
Hardy help design a federal
study of 60,000
expectant mothers and
their children that lasted
for 20 years. She served
as the lead researcher for
the Baltimore portion of
the 12-city project, which
focused on inner-city
mothers and the development
of their children.
Hardy was the first
researcher to document
the dangers of rubella
during pregnancy. She
also showed that the children
of girls younger than
18 had lower IQs and other
physical and developmental
issues later in life.
Her studies helped establish
public programs for
the economically disadvantaged
and inspired
investigation into the
effect of environment on
children’s health.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">WILLIAM ALEXANDER HAMMOND</h4>
<p>
Battlefield medicine has
come a long way since
Hammond’s day, but today’s
modern military
hospitals are a credit to his
contributions. Briefly a
professor of anatomy and
physiology at the University
of Maryland School of
Medicine, Hammond became
surgeon general of
the U.S. Army during the
Civil War. There he created
a system of ambulance
wagons and hospitals that
significantly decreased
mortality while increasing
the efficiency of moving
the wounded. He instituted
sanitary measures,
and improved record keeping,
eventually founding
what is today known as
the National Museum of
Health and Medicine.
Though his tenure in Baltimore
was brief, he found
time to introduce microscopy
to the medical school,
eventually creating one of
America’s largest microscopic
collections.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">LEO KANNER</h4>
<p>
Known as “the Father of
Child Psychiatry,” Leo Kanner
founded the first pediatric
psychiatry clinic in
the United States at The
Johns Hopkins Hospital’s Harriet Lane Home for Invalid
Children in 1930. He
also published the first English-language textbook on
child psychiatry in 1935. In
a landmark paper written in
1943, Kanner was the first to
define and coin the phrase
“infantile autism” (aka
“Kanner syndrome”). He
was also a devoted social
activist who fought for the
rights of children with autism
and other disorders
and is one of the co-founders
of <a href="https://childrensguild.org/">The Children’s Guild</a>.
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<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#c05225;">THEODORE WOODWARD</h4>
<p>
When Woodward graduated
from the UM School of Medicine
in 1938, he intended
to open his own practice.
World War II intervened.
Woodward found himself
studying infectious diseases
like dengue fever in Bermuda.
As part of the U.S.
Army Typhus Commission,
he helped combat major
breakouts of that disease
among Allied soldiers, work
for which he received numerous
awards, including
from President Roosevelt.
After the war he studied
antibiotics and other treatments,
including one that
he and his colleagues found
beneficial in curing typhoid
fever. That work netted him
a Nobel Prize nomination.
Now considered a father of
infectious disease study,
Woodward founded one of
the world’s first Divisions of
Infectious Diseases (at
UMB) and helped found the
<a href="https://www.idsociety.org/">Infectious Diseases Society
of America.</a>
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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">13.</span> <span class="aptly">The Modern Birthing Room Is Born</span></h4> 
<p>
In 1978, a time when women labored alone and dads
were excluded from the delivery room, Alan Tapper, a
founder of GBMC HealthCare’s ob-gyn department, established
the first birthing room in Maryland. It was an
appropriate step for a hospital that’s been called “the
Baby Factory,” as it delivers more babies than any other
facility in the Baltimore area (3,462 in the last fiscal
year). GBMC’s birthing room allowed fathers and other
loved ones in the room to offer support as a woman gave
birth. Rooms had a homey décor—with wallpaper, paintings,
and drapery—and medical equipment was largely
out of sight. GBMC has other claims to ob-gyn fame, including
the first perinatal center in Baltimore County
(1985), establishment of the first Lactation Department
in the Baltimore area (1989), and the first robot-assisted
gynecologic surgery at a community hospital in the mid-Atlantic (2006).
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<h4 style="padding-top:2rem;"><span class="aptly">14.</span> <span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">The University of Maryland School of Medicine launched a preventive medicine course in 1833, the first of its kind in the U.S.</span></h4>

<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—SCHOOL OF MEDICINE CATALOG, 1835. HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS, HEALTH SCIENCES AND HUMAN SERVICES LIBRARY. UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, BALTIMORE</h6>
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<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">15.</span> <span class="aptly">First Program for IVF in the U.S.</span></h4>
<p>
Georgeanna Seegar
Jones was one
of the country’s
first reproductive
endocrinologists in
1939. Her groundbreaking
research
on the pregnancy
hormone (human
chorionic gonadotropin) led to the finding
that hCG was produced by the placenta,
not the pituitary gland, as had been
previously thought, making way for the
development of the pregnancy tests that
are currently on the market. Decades
later, in 1981, she became one half of
Hopkin’s husband-wife team that created
the first program for in-vitro fertilization
in the U.S. The work led to the birth of
the first “testtube”
baby here.
Thanks to Jones,
IVF flourished
and gave hope to
countless couples
struggling with
infertility.
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<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF
THE ALAN MASON CHESNEY MEDICAL ARCHIVES OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS</h6>

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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">16.</span> <span class="freight">First Sex Reassignment Surgery in the U.S.</span></h4>
<p>
Way ahead of its time, The
Johns Hopkins Hospital established
The Gender Identity
Clinic in 1966. The clinic was
the first academic institution
in the U.S. to perform gender
reassignment surgery at a
time when many hospital
boards banned it. The clinic
became a model for other
such centers across the country,
but bias and stigma led to
its closure in 1979. By 2017,
thanks to societal shifts leading
to increased acceptance of
LGBTQ+ individuals, the hospital
opened the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/health/johns-hopkins-gender-identity-clinic-transgender-surgery/">Center for
Transgender and Gender Expansive
Health</a>. Since then, the
center’s services have included
vaginoplasty, penile construction,
as well as hormone
and voice therapy.
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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#c05225;">A Golden Idea</h4>

<p>
<b>For most of the era of modern medicine</b>, a severe
accident meant almost certain death. Enter R Adams
Cowley who, while serving as chief of surgery for the
United States Army in Europe in the years immediately
after WWII, saw how quickly European surgeons responded
to trauma and the successful survival rate of their patients.
Cowley, a heart surgeon and graduate of University of
Maryland School of Medicine, formulated from this his
theory of the “Golden Hour,” the brief span of time during
which trauma patients either get to help at a specialized
facility—or die. Cowley overturned the long-held belief that
trauma patients should go to the nearest hospital, noting
that the teams there likely lacked the necessary training.
Instead, he advocated for rapid transit via helicopter to
a shock trauma center.</p>
<p> Cowley grew his brainchild from
a two-bed center to one that today sees more than 6,500
critically ill and severely injured people annually. Its
patients have a 95-percent survival rate. <a href="https://www.umms.org/ummc/health-services/shock-trauma">The R Adams
Cowley Shock Trauma Center at University of Maryland</a>
became a model for how trauma centers were designed
around the world. Oh, and when he wasn’t becoming
the father of trauma medicine, Cowley was “among the
first to perform open-heart surgery, devised a surgical
clamp named after him, and helped design a prototype
pacemaker used by President Dwight D. Eisenhower,”
according to his obituary in <i>The New York Times</i> published
in 1991.
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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#c05225;">A Strong Vision</h4>

<p>
<b>In 1944, Valley Forge Army Hospital was the</b> epicenter of
the treatment of blinding eye injuries sustained by military
personnel in WWII. It was here, working with soldier patients,
that Richard E. Hoover became interested in helping the blind
become more independent. It was not his first experience
assisting people who were blind; prior to the war, Hoover was
a math and physical education teacher at the Maryland School
for the Blind (MSB). For decades, white canes had been used
by the blind to help them navigate obstacles but also to alert
people—namely motorists—that the person holding the bright
white stick was blind. While at Valley Forge, Hoover, along
with MSB colleague Warren Bledsoe, devised a new way of
using the conventional short, white, wooden cane for greater
independence. His idea was to lengthen the cane to match
the size and stride of the user and make it of a lighter weight
material. He conceived of the “Hoover method” of swinging
the cane back in forth to identify obstacles.</p>
<p> At Valley Forge,
he trained others who then trained soldiers in the technique.
After the war he attended medical school at Johns Hopkins,
became assistant professor of ophthalmology at Johns Hopkins
Hospital, and founded the <a href="https://www.gbmc.org/services/low-vision-hoover-center/">Dr. Richard E. Hoover Rehabilitation
Services for Low Vision and Blindness</a> at GBMC Healthcare. He
shared his teachings with MSB students and created university
training programs that launched the Hoover method all over
the globe..
</p>

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<h4 style="margin-top:0; color:#c05225;">Lending a Hand</h4>
<p>
Today we take hand surgery as a specialty for granted, but prior to WWII there
was no such thing. Hand casualties in battle were treated much like any other
wounded. A group of pioneering surgeons, however, saw the need for a special
expertise—one that tapped into orthopedics and neurosurgery as well as
plastic surgery—to treat these specific injuries. Among those surgeons was Dr.
Raymond Curtis. Curtis completed a general surgery residency in Baltimore
and during WWII was chief of hand service in the Army Medical Corps. Upon
his discharge in 1947, he returned to Union Memorial Hospital and started
a hand-focused practice. Even in the aftermath of war, the specialty was
relevant, with industrial accidents and other injuries taking a great toll on
patients’ finances and quality of life. Although it would not be named the
Curtis National Hand Institute until 1975, by the ’60s, Curtis’ hand program
had a reputation for excellence in treating injuries of the hand, wrist, arm,
elbow, and shoulder.
</p>
<p>
<a href="https://www.curtishand.com/">The Curtis National Hand Center</a> is now
the largest in the world and is designated
as a Level 1 Hand and Upper Extremity
Trauma Center—the only such center in the
U.S. Curtis began training Army surgeons
during the war and true to its roots,
every Army hand surgeon since 1963 has
completed the hand fellowship training
at Union Memorial. And Union Memorial
continues to send surgeons to Walter Reed
National Military Medical Center to care for
injured soldiers.
</p>
</div>


</div>
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<div class="medium-12 columns" style="padding-top:2rem; padding-bottom:2rem;">

<div class="medium-8 columns" >

<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span style="color:#c05225;" class="freight">17.</span> <span class="aptly">America’s First Teaching Hospital</span></h4> 
<p>
In 1807, the College of Medicine of Maryland opened its
doors in west Baltimore, becoming the nation’s first teaching
hospital. (It was re-chartered in 1812 as the University of
Maryland.) Davidge Hall still stands today at Lombard and
Greene Streets, the oldest continuously operating medical
school building still in use in the Western Hemisphere. No
surprise, it has a storied history. It was built to replicate
the Pantheon in Rome and features two semi-circular
theaters used for instruction including Anatomical Hall,
where a plaque still stands commemorating the spot where
Revolutionary War hero General LaFayette received an
honorary diploma in 1824.</p>
<p> Its early graduates range from the famous—like Archibald
“Moonlight” Graham, who was depicted in <i>Field of Dreams</i>—to the infamous, like
Samuel Mudd who notoriously treated John Wilkes Booth after he assassinated
President Lincoln. Speaking of notoriety, the school practiced the dissection of corpses
and was the first school in the country to make anatomical dissection compulsory,
in 1848. (That lab is now home to the alumni association offices.) While considered
a normal part of anatomy instruction today, two hundred years ago dissection was
thought so reprehensible that a wall was erected around the hall to keep out angry
mobs that would’ve burned the building down. (In fairness, the school did sometimes
obtain bodies for study through illegal means.) Since 1997, Davidge Hall has been
recognized as a National Historic Landmark.
</p>

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<div class="medium-4 columns" >
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/NOV_Top-Doctors24_college.jpg"/>

<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF MARYLAND CENTER FOR HISTORY AND CULTURE / JULIUS ANDERSON PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION, 1925</h6>
</div>






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<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">18.</span> <span class="freight">Cutting-Edge Treatment for Depression</span></h4>
<p>
In 2017, Sheppard Pratt conducted the largest study ever done on patients suffering
from severe treatment-resistant depression. (Roughly 30 percent of those currently
treated with medications for depression are drug-resistant, according to the
NIH.) The results found that an implantable vagus nerve stimulation device (aka “a
pacemaker for the brain”) paired with antidepressant treatment (including medication,
psychotherapy, and <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/health/ect-electroconvulsive-therapy-severe-mental-illness-treatment-baltimore-hospitals/">electroconvulsive therapy</a>) can alleviate symptoms. The
study represents 10 years of research and is a new potential treatment for millions
of people who do not respond solely to medication.
</p>

</div>
</div>

<hr/>

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<div class="medium-8 columns" >

<h4 class="freight" style="margin-bottom:0.25em; ">19. <span style="color:#c05225;">A University of
Maryland professor,
Dr. John Crawford,
discovered germ
theory in about 1790,
and also determined
that insects were
related to human
illness. Colleagues of
the time dismissed
his theories, but
history has had
the last word.</span></h4>
</div>

</div>
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<hr/>

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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:2rem; padding-bottom:2rem;">

<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span style="color:#c05225;" class="aptly">20.</span> <span class="freight">Understanding Lead Paint Poisoning</span></h4>
<p>
In 1958, J. Edmund Bradley, chief of pediatrics at
the University of Maryland School of Medicine,
co-wrote a paper with Samuel Bessman, Poverty,
Pica, and Poisoning. In it, he reported that of a
random sampling of 333 children that came
through his clinic, nearly half had abnormally
high levels of lead in their blood. The study collected
paint samples from the homes of low-income
families and found extremely high levels of
lead. Through this study, Bradley correlated poor
living conditions with childhood lead poisoning
and called for “the cooperative effort of physicians,
nurses, and social workers of municipal
health and welfare departments” to combat the
environmental public health issue.
</p>

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<hr/>

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<div class="medium-7 columns">

<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="freight" style="color:#c05225;">21.</span> <span class="aptly">Better Fracture Care</span></h4>
<p>
Dr. Nathan Ryno Smith was a chair of surgery at UMD for 50 years beginning in 1827.
He is credited with inventing a better way to set leg fractures to decrease deformity.
His “anterior splint” involved suspending the limb, once made rigid, so it didn’t rest
on the bed. Smith’s invention was perfected just in time to be widely used during
the Civil War. As the treatment record of one patient, Theodore Pease, who took a
musket ball to the right thigh at Gettysburg stated: Smith’s anterior splint continued
in its use. The wounds are discharging freely and bone is practically united.
</p>

</div>

<div class="medium-5 columns">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/NOV_Top-Doctors_Ryno-Smith.jpg"/>

<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS</h6>
</div>



</div>
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<div class="medium-12 columns" style="padding-top:2rem; padding-bottom:2rem;">

<div class="medium-6 columns" >

<h4 style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">22.</span> <span class="freight">World’s First Medical Illustration School</span></h4>
<p>
Johns Hopkins’ Department of Art as Applied to Medicine
trained illustrators in scientific illustration to help practitioners
understand the workings of the human body.
Established in 1911 under the direction of Max Brödel
(and teaching continuously ever since), it was the first
program of its kind in the world. Brödel is world-renowned
for his life-like renderings based on observation
of surgeries and autopsies. He single-handedly created
the profession, which led to the founding of other programs
across the country and remains pivotal to medical
education today. “Leave paper and pencil alone until the
mind has grasped the meaning of the object,” Brödel said.
“Medical illustration is not drawing a pretty picture. It’s
not just knowing the science. It’s being able to take science
and the art and combine them to communicate.”
</p>

</div>

<div class="medium-6 columns" >
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/NOV_Top-Doctors24_Brodel-Kidney.jpg"/>

<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—ORIGINAL ILLUSTRATIONS FROM THE MAX BRÖDEL ARCHIVES IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ART AS APPLIED TO MEDICINE, JOHNS
HOPKINS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE. USED WITH PERMISSION</h6>
</div>



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<h4 class=" mohr-black" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span class="aptly" style="color:#c05225;">23.</span> <span class="freight">Advances In Limb Lengthening</span></h4>
<p>
For years, the best method of treating limb
length discrepancies was to use painful external
fixators, metal devices that are attached to the
bones. (Amputation was another possible solution.)
Sinai Hospital physicians John Herzenberg
and Shawn Standard innovated a better way.
The two co-developed with another physician
the Precice internal limb-lengthening nail. Introduced
in 2012, the nail is a metal rod with a
magnetic motor inside of it. Using an external
remote control, the nail slowly lengthens the
limb with less pain and scarring. As one patient
stated, “Before, I had a limp in my walk; now
I have a spring in my step.”
</p>

</div>
</div>

<hr/>

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<h4 class="freight" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;">24. <span style="color:#c05225;">In the 1930s, Baltimore psychiatrist Dr. Jacob Conn developed the “play interview” (i.e., the use of dolls to act out scenarios and emotions) for the treatment of phobia in children still widely used today.</span></h4>



</div>
</div>

<hr/>


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<div class="medium-6 columns" >

<h4 class="freight" style="margin-bottom:0.25em;"><span style="color:#c05225;">25.</span> Identifiying HIV</h4>
<p>
Dr. Robert Gallo was in an NIH lab
researching tumor cell biology
when, in 1975, he was the first
person to identify a leukemia virus
that caused cancer. This was the
same era that AIDS was claiming
hundreds of thousands of lives and
Gallo's NIH work proved fortuitous
in the fight against that disease. In
1984, Gallo and French virologist
Luc Montagnier co-discovered that
AIDS was caused by a virus, which
they named human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). It was a breakthrough
in understanding the disease.
In 1996, Gallo co-founded the
Institute for Human Virology at
UMB and went on to develop the
HIV blood test to screen for the
virus and therapies that have
enabled those infected with HIV
to live longer.
</p>

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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/NOV_Top-Doctors24_Gallo.jpg"/>

<h6 class="captionVideo thin ">—COURTESY OF WIKIMEDIA COMMONS</h6>
</div>



</div>
</div>

<hr/>

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<h5 style="margin-top:0; color:#c05225;">MARY ELIZABETH GARRETT</h5>
<p>
Mary Elizabeth Garrett, daughter of B & O Railroad tycoon John Work Garrett,
was one of the wealthiest women in the U.S. and used her fortune to advance
higher education for women. Between fundraising and personal donations, she
and her friends (known as the “Friday Evening” group, inspired by their biweekly
meetings at each other’s homes) raised nearly all the $500,000 needed for the
opening of the financially strapped Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
But there were a few stipulations: They had to accept qualified women and the
medical school should be a full graduate school whose applicants had to have a
bachelor’s degree in science (which was not the norm at the time). After much
consternation, the all-male founders agreed to the terms. When the school opened
in 1893, three of the 18 students admitted were women—making it the first major
medical school to do so. Thanks to her insistence, Garrett is sometimes called
America’s greatest “coercive philanthropist.” William Osler, one of the school’s
founding physicians, famously replied, “It was a pleasure to be bought.”
</p>

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<h5 style="margin-top:0; color:#c05225;">DORTHEA DIX</h5>
<p>
Dorothea Dix was a pioneering nurse and
activist who was dedicated to improving
conditions in jailhouses and asylums. Dix’s
advocacy helped establish new institutions
in the U.S. and Europe and led to widespread
reform and changing perceptions at a time
when people struggling with mental illness
were housed alongside violent prisoners.
After documenting the shocking conditions
she observed in a Massachusetts prison
in 1841, she spent four decades lobbying
U.S. and Canadian legislators to establish
humane asylums for the mentally ill.</p>
<p> Dix
came to Maryland in 1852 to observe the
state of affairs in its jails and almshouses,
which is when she met Moses Sheppard.
Although Sheppard did not take her up on
her request that he fund a state asylum,
she proved an enormous influence on
him and his perception of treatment of
the mentally ill, resulting in his ultimate
decision to endow Sheppard Pratt. Dix
was also instrumental in recruiting nurses
for the Union army during the Civil War,
appointing more than 3,000—or about
15 percent—of them. She was known for
markedly improving care, even insisting
that rebel soldiers get the same treatment as
other soldiers. When there were shortages,
she often obtained medical supplies, linens,
and bedclothes through private sources and
never took a single day off, working for four
years straight through the war.
</p>

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<div class="medium-9 columns" >

<h5 style="margin-top:0; color:#c05225;">HORTENSE KAHN ELIASBERG</h5>
<p>
In the 1920s, rheumatic fever and
tuberculosis were significant killers
of children. In crowded, dirty cities
like Baltimore, opportunities for
respite were nil. In a world without
antibiotics, ill children were often
sent to convalesce somewhere with
fresh air, good food, and rest in order
to heal. Yet Baltimore had no such
home. Enter Hortense Kahn Eliasberg.
A resident of Reservoir Hill, Eliasberg
graduated from Goucher College and
Johns Hopkins University in an era
when fewer than 40 percent of college
degrees in the nation were awarded to
women. While researching her thesis,
Standards of Care for Convalescent
Children, Eliasberg grew interested in
respite care. At just 22 years old, the
formidable Eliasberg got Dr. William
Welch, chief physician at Johns
Hopkins Hospital School of Hygiene
and Public Health, onboard and,
leveraging her personal connections,
funded the creation of Happy Hills
Convalescent Home, which opened in
1922. Notably, children were admitted
regardless of their family’s ability to
pay. Today the home has evolved into
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/educationfamily/mt-washington-pediatric-hospital-turns-100/">Mt. Washington Pediatric Hospital</a>, a
leader in pediatric care.
</p>

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<div class="medium-9 columns" >

<h5 style="margin-top:0; color:#c05225;">MARCIA CROCKER NOYES</h5>
<p>
When Noyes became the chief medical
librarian of the Medical and Chirurgical
Faculty of the State of Maryland (now
the Maryland State Medical Society
or, simply, MedChi) in 1896, it was at a
time of robust growth for medicine and
medical literature. Far from being a
sleepy librarian stacking books, Noyes’
position was so demanding that she took
up residence in the same building as the
library, the “Faculty” building. According
to MedChi, “At that time, librarians were
expected to be on call 24/7. A physician
could ring up at any time. . . . The physician
would arrive shortly thereafter, consult
the medical book, and hurry back to his
ailing patient.”</p>
<p> Although not medically
trained, Noyes learned under the tutelage
of William Osler (of Johns Hopkins renown)
and was by all accounts a dynamic leader.
During her 50-year tenure she devised a
new system of literature classification,
served as the society’s executive secretary,
and was the chief museum curator.
The library collection grew from a few
thousand volumes to 65,000. She also
helped establish the <a href="https://www.mlanet.org/">Medical Library
Association</a>—where she was the first non-medical
president—which continues to
give an award in her honor. Noyes died the
year of her 50th anniversary celebration,
which was attended by more than 250
physicians. Her funeral was held in the
Faculty building where she lived until her
death and where staff and volunteers say
her spirit still walks the halls to this day.
</p>

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<h5 style="margin-top:0; color:#c05225;">NELLIE LOUISE YOUNG</h5>
<p>
Dr. Nellie Louise Young was
Maryland’s first Black female
physician. After graduating from
Howard University’s School of
Medicine in 1930, she soon opened
her obstetrics-gynecology practice
above her father’s drugstore in West
Baltimore. (Her father, Dr. Howard
Young, was the state’s first Black
pharmacist.) In 1938, Young opened a
Planned Parenthood Clinic. In her 52
years of practice, she held numerous
posts, including working as chief
of obstetrics at Provident Hospital,
serving as the women’s physician at
the former Morgan State College, the
girls’ physician at Frederick Douglass
High (from which she had graduated
in 1924, when it was known as the
Colored High School), and staff
physician at the Maryland Training
School for Colored Girls. Young once
said the “most wonderful thing in the
world was to deliver a healthy baby,
and to see the expression on the
mother’s face and the father’s face.”
She delivered thousands of babies
before retiring in 1984.
</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/health/baltimore-historical-healthcare-contributions-inventions-that-shaped-modern-medicine/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Karma Paws</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/karma-dogs-puts-mans-best-friend-to-work/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jul 2016 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore County Public Library]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Karma Dogs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reading]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rescue dogs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sheppard Pratt]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=4765</guid>

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			<p><strong>Forty-eight local canines are no longer just</strong> loyal pets—they’re teachers’ assistants, too. </p>
<p><a href="http://www.karmadogs.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Karma Dogs</a>, a local nonprofit, helps rescue dogs become trained therapy animals in children’s literacy, life skills, and humane education programs throughout the region, everywhere from Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital in Towson to the Baltimore County Public Library in Pikesville. </p>
<p>At various venues, the nonprofit hosts H.E.A.R.T.S. (Help Encourage All Readers To Succeed), sessions in which dogs provide moral support to children with reading difficulties. The nonprofit’s president, Kelly Gould, says dogs are the best audience because they “just give positive feedback.”</p>
<p>Karma Dogs started after Gould and her husband, Andrew, adopted two dogs—Dirk, a hound-chow mix rescued from Hurricane Katrina, and Ernie, a blind puppy. Because of his disability, Ernie needed extra help navigating the world, and Dirk stepped in. </p>
<p>Watching the dogs together made the Goulds wonder if that same helpful spirit could be applied with humans. So in the summer of 2006, they co-founded Karma Dogs with Bridget Strama, a special education teacher and Kelly’s childhood friend. All dogs enrolled in the program must pass obedience and temperament tests. </p>
<p>Though the bar is high to join, the payoff is worth it, says Kelly. “We’re teaching kids that dogs can help them, that dogs can be their friends.” </p>

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