Utilisatrice:Pierrette13/Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Apparence
La Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (en français faculté de médecine de l'université John Hopkins) est la faculté de médecine de l'Université Johns Hopkins, à Baltimore, dans leMaryland. Fondée en 1893, la faculté partage un campus avec l'hôpital Johns Hopkins et le centre pour enfants Johns Hopkins, créé en 1889.
Étudiants lauréats du prix Nobel[modifier | modifier le code]
- Gregg L. Semenza - Faculté, pédiatre, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 2019
- William Kaelin Jr. - ancien résident, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 2019
- Carol Greider - Faculté, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 2009
- Richard Axel - MD 1971, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 2004
- Peter Agre - MD 1974, prix Nobel de chimie, 2003
- Paul Greengard - PhD 1953, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 2000
- Henry David Abraham - MD 1967, prix Nobel de la paix (co-récipiendaire), 1985
- David H. Hubel - ancien résident, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1981
- Torsten Wiesel - Faculté, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1981
- Hamilton O. Smith - Faculté, MD 1956, Prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1978
- Daniel Nathans - Faculté, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1978
- Haldan Keffer Hartline - MD 1927, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1967
- Francis Peyton Rous - MD, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1966
- Joseph Erlanger - MD 1899, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1944
- Herbert Spencer Gasser - MD 1915, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1944
- George Minot - Assistant en médecine, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1934
- George Whipple - MD 1905, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1934
- Thomas Hunt Morgan - PhD 1890, prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine, 1933
Professeurs et anciens élèves notables[modifier | modifier le code]
- Dorothy Hansine Andersen – identified cystic fibrosis and Andersen's disease
- Jeremy M. Berg – former Director of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry; co-author of the Biochemistry textbook
- Alfred Blalock – Developed field of cardiac surgery; Blalock–Taussig shunt
- Eugene Braunwald – acclaimed cardiologist, trained at Hopkins; editor of Braunwald's Heart Disease, now in its 11th edition; longtime editor of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine
- Ben Carson – retired pediatric neurosurgeon, U. S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom
- Thomas Stephen Cullen – helped establish the first gynecologic pathology laboratory, and advanced understanding of endometriosis, among other gynecologic conditions
- Harvey Cushing – Father of modern neurosurgery; Cushing's syndrome; Cushing ulcer
- Walter Dandy – Neurosurgeon, namesake of the Dandy-Walker malformation
- Catherine Clarke Fenselau – Biochemist and mass spectrometrist
- Ernest William Goodpasture – pathologist, described Goodpasture syndrome
- William Halsted – Father of modern surgery; one of the four founders of Johns Hopkins Medicine
- Andy Harris – U.S. Congressman, 1st District of Maryland
- Tinsley R. Harrison – Cardiologist, editor of the first five editions of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine
- Kay Redfield Jamison – Psychologist and psychiatry professor, author of An Unquiet Mind
- Leo Kanner – Father of child psychiatry; first described autism in Autistic Disturbances of Affective Contact (1943)
- Howard Kelly – gynecologist; credited with establishing gynecology as a specialty
- Harry Klinefelter – rheumatologist, endocrinologist, namesake of Klinefelter syndrome
- Paul McHugh – former psychiatrist-in-chief at Johns Hopkins
- Victor A. McKusick – Developed the field of medical genetics; namesake of McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine; founder of OMIM
- Adolf Meyer – first psychiatrist-in-chief at Johns Hopkins
- Vernon Mountcastle – Neuroscientist, Lasker Award winner
- William Osler – Father of modern medicine; Osler–Weber–Rendu syndrome (hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia)
- Wilder Penfield – Pioneer of epilepsy neurosurgery; developed the cortical homunculus
- Dorothy Reed – Pathologist, namesake of the Reed–Sternberg cell in Hodgkin's lymphoma
- Florence Sabin – Anatomist, namesake of Sabin College at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
- Ernest Sachs – Neurosurgeon; graduated 1904
- Gertrude Stein – novelist, poet and playwright
- Helen B. Taussig – Founder of pediatric cardiology, developed Blalock–Taussig shunt; namesake of Taussig College at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
- Vivien Thomas – Developed the Blalock–Taussig shunt, namesake of Thomas College at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
- Victor Velculescu – Cancer genomics pioneer; entrepreneur
- Bert Vogelstein – Oncologist, trained in pediatrics; pioneer in cancer genetics, elucidated the role of p53 in cancer
- Rochelle Walensky – Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- David B. Weishampel – Paleontologist, author of The Dinosauria
- William H. Welch – Pathologist, Dean of American Medicine, first Dean of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
- Elias Zerhouni – Radiologist, former Director of the NIH (2002–2008)
Références[modifier | modifier le code]
Liens externes[modifier | modifier le code]
[[Catégorie:Établissement scolaire fondé en 1893]] [[Catégorie:Université Johns-Hopkins]]