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  1. Le Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania fondé en 1850 a été la deuxième institution médicale au monde établie pour former les femmes en médecine afin d'obtenir le diplôme de Docteur en médecine. Le New England Female Medical College avait été créé deux ans plus tôt en 1848[1]. Appelé à sa fondation le Female Medical College of Pennsylvania, le collège a changé son nom en ...

  2. This dissertation presents a comparative examination of a cohort of international students who attended the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania (WMCP) from the years 1883 to 1911. The physicians who receive particular attention are, in order of appearance, Anandibai Joshee (India), Susan La Flesche Picotte (Omaha), Sophia Johnson and ...

  3. The associated Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia was founded in 1861. Upon deciding to admit men in 1970, the college was renamed the Medical College of Pennsylvania (MCP). In 1930, the college opened its new campus in East Falls, which combined teaching and hospital clinical care in one facility. It was the first purpose-built hospital in the ...

  4. Renamed Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania (MCP) and is the last medical school to go coed in 1970 as MCP. Became Drexel University College of Medicine in 2002. 1869: Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania applies and receives permission to have its women students attend a clinic at Philadelphia’s Pennsylvania Hospital.

  5. 24 de ago. de 2017 · Anandibai Joshee (left), Kei Okami and Tabat M. Islambooly, students from the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania. Wikimedia Commons. On February 24, 1883 18-year ...

  6. Anna Elizabeth Broomall (March 4, 1847 – April 4, 1931) was an American obstetrician, surgeon, and educator who taught obstetrics at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania.She established the first maternal health and prenatal care clinic in the United States, located at the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia, and used surgical innovations to reduce maternal mortality.

  7. In an essay she wrote to mark the seventy-fifth anniversary of her alma mater, the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, in 1925, Dr. Hurd-Mead reminisced about her career as a woman physician, looking back to a time before the introduction of bacteriology, before routine x-rays, and when whisky was the usual prescription for pneumonia.