Dr. Jane C. Wright (1919-2013) rose from the segregated halls of Harlem Hospital to become the first African American woman appointed Professor of Surgery at a major medical institution. In a medical world dominated by surgery, she proved that chemistry could defeat cancer.

Wright did not just advance medicine-she redefined it. She invented the tissue culture method, establishing the bedrock for modern personalized oncology by predicting which drugs would work before treatment began. Her courageous trials with Triethylene Melamine (TEM) and her rigorous protocols for high-dose Methotrexate fundamentally changed the prognosis for millions with solid tumors and pediatric cancers.

This is the essential story of a quiet revolutionary: a brilliant physician-scientist whose lifelong fight for health equity and scientific rigor made her one of the most transformative, yet unsung, figures in medical history. Approx.150 pages, 30900 word count



Autorentext

Born and raised in a small town on the east coast of Scotland, the author brings a unique and refreshing voice to his writing. A late-in-life diagnosis of Asperger's Syndrome illuminated his lifelong journey, giving him a deeper understanding of the distinct way he sees the world.

Describing himself as an optimist on a mission to entertain and inform, he aims to take the reader's imagination to its limits and deliver a truly unforgettable experience.

Titel
The Architect of Modern Oncology: Dr. Jane C. Wright
EAN
9798232408398
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
18.11.2025
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
0.33 MB