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Classes at the University of Melbourne began in 1853 and in 1862 the university established Australia's first medical school. [5] Appointed as professor of anatomy and pathology at the university in 1882, H. B. Allen oversaw the design process of the new building. His first task was to create a large and efficient museum.
It had its roots in the pathology practice of Douglass Laboratories. In 1991, Douglass Laboratories opened a pathology branch in Adelaide, South Australia. [4] In 1993, Colin Goldschmidt was appointed Managing Director for the group of laboratories. [4] In 1997, Barratt Smith Moran Pathology changed its name to Capital Pathology.
Healthscope is a private healthcare provider in Australia with 41 hospitals. [1]Formed in 1985, the Healthscope Group has a long history in the private health care industry, and was initially listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) in 1994.
Virtus Diagnostics was established as a separate division in 2015 and offers general pathology services as well as specialist fertility and genetic testing. [ 3 ] Virtus Health completed a number of acquisition, including Canberra Fertility Centre in 2016, [ 4 ] IDS Pathology in 2015, [ 5 ] Rotunda IVF in 2015, [ 6 ] TasIVF in 2014 [ 7 ] IVF ...
MUP was founded in 1922 as Melbourne University Press to sell text books and stationery to students, and soon began publishing books itself. Over the years scholarly works published under the MUP imprint have won numerous awards and prizes.
Colin Robert Andrew Laverty (26 May 1937 – 9 February 2013) [1] was an Australian medical practitioner and was the first to confirm (using electronmicroscopy) that the human papillomavirus was much more common in the cervix than previously thought and, in 1978, he suggested that this virus be considered as possibly involved in the causation of cervical cancer. [2]
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It continues in series publications entitled the Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (1926–28), the Archives of Pathology (1928–50), the A.M.A. Archives of Pathology (1950–60), and the Archives of Pathology (1960–75).