Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Philip D'Arcy Hart. Philip Montagu D'Arcy Hart, CBE (25 June 1900 – 30 July 2006) was a seminal British medical researcher and pioneer in tuberculosis treatment. Personal life. Philip D'Arcy Hart was the grandson of Samuel Montagu, 1st Baron Swaythling. He was educated at Clifton College. [1]

    • 25 June 1900
    • Medicine
    • 30 July 2006 (aged 106)
    • British
  2. 24 de ago. de 2006 · Medical researcher who pioneered the controlled clinical trial as a gold standard and who demonstrated the efficacy of streptomycin as a treatment for tuberculosis. In a long career—he lived to 106 and worked until he was 102—Philip D'Arcy Hart showed that pneumoconiosis was an industrial disease for which sufferers should ...

  3. Philip Montagu D’Arcy Hart. Tuberculosis researcher who pioneered properly controlled clinical trials at the British Medical Research Council. He was born on June 25, 1900, in London, UK, and died on July 31, 2006, aged 106 years.

  4. 29 de ago. de 2006 · It is thanks largely to the work of Dr Philip Montague D'Arcy Hart, who has died aged 106, that the battle against tuberculosis made big advances, leading to the dramatic decline of the...

  5. 2 de sept. de 2006 · Philip D'Arcy Hart had been a consultant at University College Hospital in London, UK, for just 3 years when, in 1937, he decided to leave clinical practice in favour of investigating the diseases of coal-miners at the Medical Research Council (MRC). It was a choice that meant putting aside a potentially lucrative career in medicine.

    • Stephen Pincock
    • 2006
  6. Philip D’Arcy Hart was born in 1900 into a family prominent in politics and finance. His grandfather was first Baron Swaythling, founder of the banking firm Samuel Montagu and Liberal MP for the Whitechapel Division of Tower Hamlets, London.

  7. 30 de jul. de 2006 · Philip Montagu D’Arcy Harts life spanned the entire twentieth century and his work contributed to many of the transformations in medicine and medical research that characterised that century.