Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Jesse William Lazear (May 2, 1866 – September 25, 1900) was an American physician, best known for deliberately allowing a mosquito to bite him to prove it was how yellow fever was transmitted. His hypothesis was correct and he died 17 days after the transmission.

  2. Se brindan algunos datos acerca de la vida y obra del doctor Jesse William Lazear, uno de los integrantes de la comisión de médicos enviada a Cuba en 1900 por el gobierno de los Estados Unidos de América para investigar las enfermedades infecciosas prevalentes en la isla, en especial en lo relativo a la etiología y la prevención de la ...

  3. Jesse William Lazear. Uno de los integrantes de la comisión de médicos enviada a Cuba en 1900 por el gobierno de los Estados Unidos de América para investigar las enfermedades infecciosas prevalentes en la isla, en especial en lo relativo a la causa y la prevención de la fiebre amarilla . Sumario. 1 Síntesis biográfica. 2 Estudios.

    • Fiebre amarilla
    • 2 de mayo de 1866Baltimore, Estados Unidos
    • 25 de septiembre de 1900La Habana, Cuba
    • Jesse William Lazear
  4. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Jesse William Lazear was an American physician and member of the commission that proved that the infectious agent of yellow fever is transmitted by a mosquito, later known as Aëdes aegypti. Lazear received his medical degree (1892) from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Contribución de Jesse Lazear a la confirmación de la teoría finlaísta. ... Jesse William Lazear Memorial. Science, 14 (1901), pp. 225.

  6. 28 de ago. de 2013 · Jesse William Lazear was born in Baltimore in 1866. He earned his bachelor’s degree at Johns Hopkins University in 1889, followed by an MD from Columbia in 1892. Returning to Hopkins after further study in Europe, he was appointed bacteriologist in the School of Medicine.

  7. Hace 4 días · Jesse Lazear (1866-1900) When Jesse Lazear died from yellow fever, he left a wife, a newborn child, and an infant. He also left a lasting contribution to the scientific understanding of the...