Putting together the pieces of polio: how Dorothy Horstmann helped solve the puzzle

Yale J Biol Med. 2011 Jun;84(2):83-9.

Abstract

Dr. Dorothy Horstmann, epidemiologist, virologist, clinician, and educator, was the first woman appointed as a professor at the Yale School of Medicine. Horstmann made significant contributions to the fields of public health and virology, her most notable being the demonstration that poliovirus reached the central nervous system via the bloodstream, upsetting conventional wisdom and paving the way for polio vaccines. In 1961, she was appointed a professor at Yale School of Medicine, and in 1969, she became the first woman at Yale to receive an endowed chair, which was named in honor of her mentor, Dr. John Rodman Paul. In this review, the major scientific contributions of Dr. Dorothy Horstmann will be highlighted from her more than 50-year tenure at Yale School of Medicine.

Keywords: oral; polio; poliovirus; poliovirus vaccine.

Publication types

  • Biography
  • Historical Article
  • Portrait

MeSH terms

  • History, 20th Century
  • History, 21st Century
  • Poliomyelitis / immunology
  • Poliomyelitis / virology
  • Poliovirus
  • Poliovirus Vaccines*

Substances

  • Poliovirus Vaccines

Personal name as subject

  • Dorothy Horstmann