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The lonely grave of Harriet Garrison's mother, Amelia, in tiny Girton Cemetery in rural Nachusa,IL. Harriet Garrison(1848-1930) was an early female doctor,lecturer,and medical writer. Born a wealthy farmers daughter, she took an early interest in the human body. She attended seminary in nearby Mt. Morris and later women's college earning a degree in medicine there even though the college had only 2 medical lecture courses. She worked for a local doctor before opening her own successful practice in Dixon,IL, then a town of 2500. She wrote numerous papers on medicine and was invited to lecture throughout the states including at prestigious conferences in New York. Her grave also lies in tiny Girton Cemetery, one of those lonely country cemeteries that you really have to look for to find. The last burial I could find was in the '40s,and a large percentage of the headstones were partially or totally missing....

 

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet_E._Garrison#cite_note-Dix...

Veterinary on a farm performing a physical examination in a cow

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In 1817-1820 the German botanist and explorer Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius (1794-1868) travelled widely in Brazil. In his enormous collection of specimens was this Aristolochia cymbifera of the Birthwort or Dutchman's Pipe family (called Jarrinha in Brazil). At Munich he and another today famous botanist - Joseph Gerhard Zuccarini (1797-1848) - who was a gifted draughtsman as well, put together an illustrated volume of South American plants. In it they described this Birthwort.

The word 'Aristolochia' is thought to derive from the Greek for 'best' and 'delivery' (as in the 'delivery of a child'). The liquid extracted from its roots was used in medicine to expel the placenta after childbirth.

Zuccarini had a wide European network of like-minded naturalists and explorers. Another of these was the famous Philipp Franz von Siebold (1796-1866), expert on Japan before that country was opened to the West in the mid-nineteenth century (1852-1854 by Admiral Perry). Von Siebold had lived the life of a doctor, naturalist and spy in Japan between 1823 and 1830, when he was expelled. In that time he had taken a common-law wife, Kusumoto Taki "Sonagi" (1807-1865). Their daughter Kusumoto Ine (1827-1903) became Japan's first female doctor practising western medicine. She specialised in gynaecology, but I haven't been able to discover whether she used our Aristolochia in her practice. Zuccarini helped Von Siebold in publishing the latter's Flora of Japan, although a complete edition had to wait until Von Siebold's sons completed it in the 1870s.

To connect again to Leiden, where this plant is in the wonderful green houses of the Hortus Botanicus: Von Siebold and his collection moved here upon his adventurous return to Europe. His house is now an exciting little museum asking to be visited.

But I had to return to my meetings, leaving another visit for a later day. It had been a well-worth half an hour, though, in the Green House as the Hortus itself was awash with rain.

Veterinary on a farm performing a physical examination in a cow

What does The Doctor not know? She will learn in Flux. Baltimore Comic Con October 2021

This vignette of Mae Jemison is part of "Women of NASA," a project on the LEGO Ideas contest celebrating five pioneering women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Vote to make this a real LEGO set: ideas.lego.com/projects/147876

 

Trained as a medical doctor, Jemison became the first African-American woman in space in 1992. After retiring from NASA, Jemison established a company that develops new technologies and encourages students in the sciences.

 

If this project receives 10,000 votes, you could soon buy one at a LEGO store near you!

 

The full Women of NASA set includes four additional minifigures — of Sally Ride, Katherine Johnson, Margaret Hamilton, and Nancy Grace Roman — plus vignettes including a microscale Hubble Space Telescope, space shuttle, and replica of a famous photo showing the code that got astronauts to the moon.

 

To see the full set and to vote, visit: ideas.lego.com/projects/147876. Thanks for your support!

 

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Item 100429, Fleets and Facilities Department Imagebank Collection (Record Series 0207-01), Seattle Municipal Archives.

Elias Wrigley Gaken, born 21:01 on Sunday, 30 January 2022 in Mt. Pleasant, MI

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Captain Sarah Vesey talks to Afghan children during a Provincial Reconstruction Team visit to the Women’s Hospital in Tarin Kot, Afghanistan.

 

Captain Sarah Vesey of the Joint Task Force Headquarters regularly attends activities and development project sites in Uruzgan and is encouraged by the increasing numbers of females taking an active role in the community.

 

There is a female doctor at the Tarin Kot hospital and programs are in place to train community members in basic first aid and in particular midwifery.

 

__________________________________

 

Photographer: SGT Neil Ruskin

Image 20110301adf8239682_124 from images.defence.gov.au

 

Like to see related images - visit the Image Series on the Defence Image Library

  

Female doctor looking into microscope.

Female Doctor Nurse Hospital Worker on White

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Hans Heysen and Nora Heysen and the Cedars.

Sir Hans Heysen was born in Hamburg in Germany and migrated to SA in 1883 when he was seven years old. At age 14 he enrolled in James Ashton’s Norwood Art School. From the age of 16(1893) his works were being exhibited in galleries in Adelaide. He loved the Australian landscape and one of his favourite haunts for painting was the Onkaparinga Valley near the village of Grunthal. In the mid 1890s Robert Barr Smith paid the fees for Heysen to attend the school of design at the Art Gallery of Adelaide. Other patrons paid for his studies of art in Europe on condition that they could sell the works of art he produced whilst there! He returned to Adelaide in 1903, married in 1904 and continued to exhibit in Adelaide and Melbourne. In 1908 he rented a cottage near Grunthal as he loved the big gums of what became Heysen Country so much. As his fame and commissions grew he was able to buy in 1912 a nearby property, the Cedars, with 36 acres of big gum country. He soon added a studio (1912) and enlarged the house in 1912 and again in 1924 to accommodate his eight children and one adopted child. He transformed the original Victorian villa style house into an Arts and Crafts Federation bungalow style house. He travelled to the Flinders Ranges for the first time in 1926 and by then he was a well established and prominent artist with many prizes and awards to his name. His artist recognition continued and he was knighted in 1959. Sir Hans Heysen died in the Mt Barker Hospital in 1968 and was buried in Hahndorf. Only one of his children showed artistic talent and that was daughter Nora. A number of his paintings depict the country between Verdun, Balhannah and Hahndorf including Summer 1908; Red Gold 1913; The Road 1918; At The Panels 1920; The Toilers 1920 ; Light and Shade 1923; and Twp white Gums near Ambleside 1944 .

 

Nora Heysen was born in 1911 just before the Heysens moved into the Cedars. She grew up here and attended school at the Convent of Mercy Mt Barker. At 15 years of age she started art training at the North Adelaide School of Fine Arts which was eventually subsumed into the University of South Australia. Next she studied at the Royal SA Society of the Arts and she had her first exhibition with them in 1928 at 17 years of age. From 1930 she had her own studio at the Cedars and she had an exhibition in Sydney in 1930. By 1932 she had works in the NSW, QLD and SA art galleries. Unlike her father she specialised in still life and flowers which her father immediately stopped painting. He continued with his eucalypts and landscapes. In 1934 she sailed to Europe for further art study and did not return to Adelaide until 1937. She continued to exhibit, won more awards and moved to Sydney to live in 1939. She often revisited her family at the Cedars but never lived there again, except for some recuperation for part of 1946 after the War. Her life took a dramatic turn with the start of World War Two. She became the first female Australian War Artist from 1943 serving time mainly in Papua New Guinea. She completed 170 paintings for the War Office and 152 of them now reside in the Australian War Memorial in Canberra. Whilst in New Guinea she met a British medical officer Dr Robert Black. She began a relationship with him that resulted in his divorce and his remarriage to her ten years later in 1953. She travelled in Europe in 1947 and 1948 and returned to live in Sydney in 1949 where she stayed for the rest of her life in the house she purchased with Dr Black called The Chalet at Hunters Hill. She died there at The Chalet in 2003 although she had divorced Dr Black in 1972. She won many awards including the Archibald and the Melrose Prize for Portraiture. She specialised in portraits and still life. She was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1998.

 

Hahndorf.

The origins of Hahndorf can be indirectly traced back to George Fife Angas, one of the financiers of SA and the SA Company. Through his SA agent Mr Flaxman, Angas purchased seven Special Surveys totalling 28,000 acres in the Barossa Valley in 1839. But whilst still in England in 1838 George Fife Angas met Lutheran Pastor Kavel and then soon after he financed Pastor Kavel’s passage to SA along with and 250 German Lutherans immigrants. Angas wanted to have a supply of potential labourers and possible tenants for his land purchases in the SA colony. His actions encouraged other German Lutherans to migrate to SA. Another group of German Lutherans arrived in SA in 1838 aboard the ship the Zebra under the command of Captain Hahn. Captain Hahn searched for suitable land for the 200 or so people from the Zebra so that they could settle together as a religious community. He accidentally met William Dutton who had just paid for the Mt Barker Special Survey of 1839. Hahn asked for 100 acres, to be rent free in the first year, to help the Lutherans become established near Mt Barker. Around 150 acres were allotted to the Germans by Dutton, Finniss and MacFarlane from the Mt Barker Special Survey and 240 acres were purchased from the government. Soon more German Lutherans, including some from Klemzig and Pastor Kavel’s group joined the original group led by Captain Hahn. They formed a village in early 1839 along traditional German lines and called it Hahndorf after the Captain that had been so helpful to them. The story of Hahndorf had begun. The land was divided between the 54 founding Lutheran families and Hahndorf thus became the second (after Klemzig) and eventually oldest surviving German settlement in Australia. But it did not remain that way for long. In the 1840s some families moved away to other areas of German settlement, partly because of religious splits between Pastor Kavel and Pastor Fritzsche and by the 1850s English background families started moving into the village of Hahndorf as well. As most families had a frontage to the main street many of the original buildings from the 1840s and early 1850s remain today with their typical German architectural style. They include houses, the old mill (the first settlers grew wheat for the Adelaide market), two Lutheran churches, St. Pauls (1890) and St. Michaels (1858, the second church on the site - the first one opened in 1840), two of the early hotels, several early stores and the Hahndorf Academy. The Hahndorf Academy opened in 1857 as a school for the Lutherans where they were taught in German but learned English as well. The current large Academy building was built with its two storeys in 1871. In 1876 it also became a Lutheran seminary for a short time before reverting to a secular Academy which finally closed in 1912.

  

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Central Medical Imaging (CMI) has officially launched our new website at www.cmidiagnostics.com.

  

Our newly designed website allows us to remain current with emerging technology, while enabling our referring physicians rapid access to critical patient information. Physicians can now quickly and easily access their patient’s reports and images electronically by scrolling to the bottom of our website and clicking on Physicians Portal.

 

For more information visit www.cmidiagnostics.com

Our objective of providing business and professional liability solutions to the medical community.

Entente conclue pour les employés du CHSLD Domaine Saint-Dominique, membres des TUAC 501 | Lire la suite: goo.gl/u0dr9V | #TUAC #UFCW #UFCWCanada #FTQ #SyndQC #ConventionCollective #ContratTravail

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Female doctor make online video call consult patient on mobile phone and sit at work desk. Medical assistant therapist videoconferencing to web camera. Telemedicine concept. Mockup. Close up view

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The second stop on our ''Highlights of Ephesus'' sightseeing excursion was the Ephesus Archaeological Site (Efes Ören Yeri). We entered through upper (south) gate, and began our sightseeing near the State Agora before proceeding along Curetes Street, which extends from Domitian Square to the Library of Celsus. In this photo, you can see a (currently headless) statue that was erected during the Byzantine era to honor a female doctor who rendered great services to the citizens of Ephesus.

 

A few details on this ancient road:

 

Curetes Street

During the Roman Empire period, Ephesus was home to a number of curates, or embolos -- priests who were involved in religious and state affairs, and who tended the sacred fire at the Prytaneion or Municipality Palace. Along the marble-paved street that stretched between Domitian Square and the Library of Celsus, there were a series of columns with the names of curates inscribed along the base. These inscriptions gave the street its name. Shops, fountains, and sculptures lined both sides of the street, while a series of terrace houses climbed the slope behind the south side of Curetes Street.

 

Brief History of Ephesus:

Ephesus -- known as Ἔφεσος in Greek and Efes in Turkish -- was an ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia. It was originally established in the 10th century B.C. by Attic and Ionian Greek colonists. Ephesus flourished after it came under Roman control in 129 B.C., during which time it is estimated to have had a population of 33,500 to 56,000 people. It was renowned for its splendid architecture, including the Temple of Artemis (circa 550 B.C.), which was recognized as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World until it was destroyed during a Goth raid in 268 A.D. During the Byzantine era (395-1308), Emperor Constantine I rebuilt much of the city and erected new public baths. The city was partially destroyed by an earthquake in 614 A.D. and was later sacked by Arabs during the mid 600s and early 700s. Its role as a commercial center declined as its harbor was slowly silted up by the Cayster River and the town lost its trade access to the Aegean Sea. Ephesus eventually fell under Turkish control; after a brief period of renewed prosperity and building during the early 14th century, the city was eventually abandoned by the 15th century. Excavations of the site were conducted by British archaeologists in the 1860s-70s, and later by German and Austrian architects in the 1890s. Today, the Austrian Archaeological Institute still continues ongoing conservation and restoration of Ephesus.

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Female doctor images : Healthcare photographs by San Francisco Bay Area - corporate and annual report - photographer Robert Houser. 2005 pictures.

A photo of mature female doctor discussing with team in hospital. Female professionals are in meeting. Staff in uniform is sitting at brightly lit workplace.

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Cập nhật chia sẻ 30 Slide chủ đề y tế chuyên nghiệp, giúp bạn nhanh chóng hoàn thành bài thuyết trình của mình. Download Now

The second stop on our ''Highlights of Ephesus'' sightseeing excursion was the Ephesus Archaeological Site (Efes Ören Yeri). We entered through upper (south) gate, and began our sightseeing near the State Agora before proceeding along Curetes Street, which extends from Domitian Square to the Library of Celsus. Here, visitors make their way down Curetes Street toward the Library of Celsus. Marble columns line either side of the street; and at the far right is a (currently headless) statue that was erected during the Byzantine era to honor a female doctor who rendered great services to the citizens Ephesus.

 

A few details on this ancient road:

 

Curetes Street

During the Roman Empire period, Ephesus was home to a number of curates, or embolos -- priests who were involved in religious and state affairs, and who tended the sacred fire at the Prytaneion or Municipality Palace. Along the marble-paved street that stretched between Domitian Square and the Library of Celsus, there were a series of columns with the names of curates inscribed along the base. These inscriptions gave the street its name. Shops, fountains, and sculptures lined both sides of the street, while a series of terrace houses climbed the slope behind the south side of Curetes Street.

 

Brief History of Ephesus:

Ephesus -- known as Ἔφεσος in Greek and Efes in Turkish -- was an ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia. It was originally established in the 10th century B.C. by Attic and Ionian Greek colonists. Ephesus flourished after it came under Roman control in 129 B.C., during which time it is estimated to have had a population of 33,500 to 56,000 people. It was renowned for its splendid architecture, including the Temple of Artemis (circa 550 B.C.), which was recognized as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World until it was destroyed during a Goth raid in 268 A.D. During the Byzantine era (395-1308), Emperor Constantine I rebuilt much of the city and erected new public baths. The city was partially destroyed by an earthquake in 614 A.D. and was later sacked by Arabs during the mid 600s and early 700s. Its role as a commercial center declined as its harbor was slowly silted up by the Cayster River and the town lost its trade access to the Aegean Sea. Ephesus eventually fell under Turkish control; after a brief period of renewed prosperity and building during the early 14th century, the city was eventually abandoned by the 15th century. Excavations of the site were conducted by British archaeologists in the 1860s-70s, and later by German and Austrian architects in the 1890s. Today, the Austrian Archaeological Institute still continues ongoing conservation and restoration of Ephesus.

I sat next to Payal and her mother in Amsterdam last week. She was so beautiful, I had to photograph her.

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Veterinary on a farm performing a physical examination in a cow

Cheerful woman doctor sitting on the sofa with a senior man and holding his hand.

 

[url=http://www.istockphoto.com/search/lightbox/9786662][img]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/40117171/medicine.jpg[/img][/url]

 

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