When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. St Bartholomew's Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Bartholomew's_Hospital

    St Bartholomew's Hospital, looking towards Farringdon. In 1843, St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College was established to train medics although considered to have been started by John Abernethy when the hospital built a theatre for his lectures at the beginning of the century. [26]

  3. Ruth Redpath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Redpath

    In 1965, Redpath became a resident medical officer at the Royal Melbourne Hospital. [3] In 1975 she became a consultant radiation oncologist at St Bartholomew's Hospital and the Hospital for Sick Children in London, where she learned from an innovator of the modern hospice movement, Cicely Saunders, and the UK system of palliative care. [2]

  4. Clive Baldock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clive_Baldock

    Clive Baldock is a British-born Australian professor. He graduated with a BSc (hons) in Physics from the University of Sussex, an MSc in Radiation Physics from St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College, University of London, a PhD in Medical Physics from King's College London and a Masters of Tertiary Education Management from the University of Melbourne.

  5. Patricia Lindop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patricia_Lindop

    Patricia Lindop at a Pugwash conference in the later 1950s [1]. Patricia Joyce Lindop FRCP (21 June 1930 – 1 February 2018) was a British professor of radiation biology at the University of London and the organiser of at least 100 "Pugwash" meetings at which scientists met to discuss their campaign for nuclear disarmament.

  6. Edward Browne (physician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Browne_(physician)

    A week after this significant event, Browne went to London. He attended the lectures of Dr. Christopher Terne, physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, and married Terne's daughter Henrietta in 1672. His notes of Dr. Teme's lectures exist in manuscript in the British Museum. When the lectures were ended, Browne returned to Norwich, and soon ...

  7. Joseph Rotblat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Rotblat

    Rotblat was determined that his research should have only peaceful ends, and so became interested in the medical and biological uses of radiation. In 1949, he became Professor of Physics at St Bartholomew's Hospital ("Barts"), London, [ 35 ] [ 36 ] a teaching hospital associated with the University of London.

  8. Sir Norman Moore, 1st Baronet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Norman_Moore,_1st_Baronet

    After clinical studies at St Bartholomew's Hospital, he qualified as a doctor in 1872. He obtained his MD in 1876, with his thesis, The Causes and Treatment of Rickets . [ 3 ] He spent his entire career at St Bartholomew's, serving as warden of the college from 1873 to 1891, and in the roles of lecturer in anatomy, pathology, and medicine, and ...

  9. Thomas Watson (physician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Watson_(physician)

    He entered St John's College, Cambridge, graduating in 1815. [2] He was elected a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1826 and delivered the Gulstonian Lecture in 1827 and the Lumleian lecture in 1831. He studied medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital and Edinburgh and graduated M.D. from Cambridge University in 1825.