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・ Abram Ozmun
・ Abram P. Haring
・ Abram Penn
・ Abram Penn Staples
・ Abram Petrovich Gannibal
・ Abram Poindexter Maury
・ Abram Rabinovich
・ Abram Ranovich
・ Abram Raselemane
・ Abram Robertson Byram
・ Abram Room
・ Abram S. Hewitt (fireboat)
・ Abram S. Hewitt State Forest
・ Abram S. Isaacs
・ Abram S. Piatt
Abram Salmon Benenson
・ Abram Samoilovitch Besicovitch
・ Abram Schlemowitz
・ Abram Shulsky
・ Abram Slutsky
・ Abram Smythe Palmer
・ Abram Svyadoshch
・ Abram Szpiro
・ Abram Trigg
・ Abram Vaysbeyn
・ Abram W. Foote
・ Abram W. Harris
・ Abram Wakeman
・ Abram William Lauder
・ Abram Williams


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Abram Salmon Benenson : ウィキペディア英語版
Abram Salmon Benenson

Abram Salmon Benenson (1914 – December 15, 2003) was an authority in public health, preventive medicine, military medicine, and "shoe-leather" epidemiology. He was best known as the editor-in-chief (1970 to 1995) for the ''Control of Communicable Diseases Manual'' of the American Public Health Association. His tenure as editor was so lengthy that the manual was often known as the "Benenson Book".
==Biography==
Benenson graduated from Cornell Medical School in New York City and interned for 3 years before entering the U.S. Army Medical Corps. He earned board certifications in pathology, preventive medicine and public health, and microbiology. His military career included assignments as commanding officer, Tropical Research Medical Laboratory in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and as director of Experimental Medicine, Camp Detrick, Maryland; of Division of Communicable Disease and Immunology at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR); of the Pakistan–Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) Cholera Research Laboratory in Dacca, Bangladesh, and of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory in Panama. He retired from the military in 1962 as a colonel.
Benenson then served on numerous commissions and committees throughout his long civilian career, for which his expertise in smallpox, cholera, vaccines, and biological warfare was utilized to make public health policy decisions at both state and federal levels. Highlights of his 60-year medical career included involvement in the eradication of smallpox (1979); the development of the jet injector for vaccines and of oral rehydration for the victims of debilitating diarrhea; AIDS, cholera, and laboratory technology. He subsequently held academic positions at the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the Department of Community Medicine, University of Kentucky College of Medicine in Lexington; and the Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the Graduate School of Public Health at San Diego State University in California.

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