Suchergebnisse
Suchergebnisse:
Dr. Maude Abbott’s journey to becoming a pioneer in the field of cardiology was not easy. She was born in 1869 in St. Andrews East, Quebec. Tuberculosis claimed her mother when Abbott was a mere seven months old, and her father soon abandoned his family. As a girl, Abbott excelled at school, but her grandmother’s limited resources and society’s myopic expectations of women made higher ...
1. Jan. 2017 · Maude Abbott retired in 1936 and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by McGill. She died of a stroke in Montreal on September 2, 1940. Maude Abbott is remembered today not only as a pioneer woman doctor but also as a leader in pathology and cardiology. The National Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada designated her as a Person of ...
Maude Abbott (Saint-André-d'Argenteuil, 18 marzo 1869 – Montréal, 2 settembre 1940) è stata un medico canadese. È stata una tra le prime donne medico ed esperta nelle malattie cardiache congenite.
Maude Abbott est une pionnière de l'accession des femmes à la pratique et à l'enseignement de la médecine au Québec et au Canada. Elle est la deuxième femme à obtenir un diplôme en médecine au Québec (Université Bishop's, 1894), après Octavia Grace Ritchie England. À compter de 1897, Maude Abbott prodigue des soins aux femmes et ...
20. Mai 2020 · Dr. Maude Abbott's work revolutionized the way doctors around the world diagnose and treat heart defects. Her Atlas of Congenital Cardiac Disease, published ...
- 58 Sek.
- 180,2K
- Historica Canada
Maude Elizabeth Seymour Abbott (født 18. mars 1869 i Saint-André-Est i Quebec i Canada, død 2. september 1940 i Montréal) var en kanadisk lege. Hun var en av de første kvinnelige legene i Canada og en ledende ekspert på medfødte hjertefeil [8] .
Early in life, Maude Elizabeth Seymour Abbott showed ambition for a career in medicine. While still an undergraduate at McGill University in Montreal, she asked her grandmother if she might become a doctor. Her grandmother replied, "Dear child, you may do anything you like." In spite of intervention on her behalf from a relative—John Abbott, a McGill graduate who had been dean of its law ...