Dorothy M. Horstmann

Dorothy Millicent Horstmann (July 2, 1911 – January 11, 2001) was an American epidemiologist, virologist and pediatrician whose research on the spread of poliovirus in the human bloodstream helped set the stage for the development of the polio vaccine. She was the first woman appointed as a professor at the Yale School of Medicine and held a joint appointment in the Yale School of Public Health.

Dorothy Millicent Horstmann
Born(1911-07-02)July 2, 1911
DiedJanuary 11, 2001(2001-01-11) (aged 89)
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley, University of California, San Francisco, Vanderbilt University Hospital
Known forpoliovirus
Scientific career
Fieldsvirology, epidemiology
InstitutionsYale School of Medicine

Early life and education

Horstmann was born on July 2, 1911, in Spokane, Washington and earned her undergraduate degree in 1936 from the University of California, Berkeley. She received her medical training at the University of California, San Francisco, earning her medical degree in 1940 and developed an interest in infectious disease after hearing lectures delivered by Karl Friedrich Meyer while at San Francisco General Hospital, where she performed her internship and residency. She performed further training at Vanderbilt University Hospital.[1]

Horstmann had initially been rejected from the residency program at Vanderbilt as the school's chief of medicine Hugh Morgan would only choose men to participate. Months later she received another letter from Morgan asking whether "Dr. Horstmann" was still interested in the position, having forgotten the original reason for her exclusion. Morgan "all but went into shock" after she accepted the position and showed up for work, but the year ended successfully.[2]

Hired by the Yale School of Medicine in 1942 as a Commonwealth Fellow in the Section of Preventive Medicine, Horstmann specialized in internal medicine under Dr. John R. Paul.[3] She spent 1944 teaching medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, but returned to Yale the following year.[4] Horstmann continued her work at Yale with a joint appointment in both the department of pediatrics and the department of epidemiology, which became part of a newly created Yale School of Public Health.[5]

Epidemiologist

She switched her focus to infectious disease after working on a polio outbreak in New Haven, Connecticut.[1] she worked together on Yale's polio team with researchers including Joseph L. Melnick, which used an approach they called "clinical epidemiology" to monitor polio outbreaks in Connecticut, Illinois, New Jersey and New York, as well as an outbreak in Hickory, North Carolina that was one of the worst in the century. At each site, the team analyzed sanitary conditions in the water supply, collected insects that might be possible vectors and took blood samples from patients with symptoms and those without, all as part of an effort to identify how the poliovirus was transmitted between people.[2] Overturning the conventional wisdom that the polio virus affected the nervous system directly, Horstmann and her fellow researchers such as Robert W. McCollum discovered traces of poliovirus in the bloodstream, concluding that polio reached the brain by way of the blood.[6][7]

Nobel Prize-winner Dr. John Franklin Enders credited Horstmann with shaking the "widely held feeling that the virus grew solely in nerve cells".[1] Yale's medical historian John F. Fulton called Horstmann's discovery "medical history" and stated that the discovery of how polio was transmitted in the blood was "as exciting as anything that has happened in the Yale Medical School since I first came here in 1930 and is a tremendous credit to your industry and scientific imagination".[2] The oral polio vaccine was developed based on this research and Horstmann was able to confirm by the late 1950s that tests of the vaccine conducted in the Soviet Bloc were effective, confirming preliminary results that showed that the vaccine worked and leading to its widespread use in the United States.[8]

Horstmann also did research on the clinical epidemiology of the rubella virus. Her work played a significant role in assuring the safety and effectiveness of rubella vaccine.

Yale chose her as a full professor in 1961, making her the first woman to receive the position at the medical school.[3] Horstmann was named to an endowed chair in epidemiology and pediatrics in 1969. A former president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, Horstmann was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences.[1]

Horstmann died at age 89 on January 11, 2001, in New Haven, Connecticut due to complications of Alzheimer's disease.[1]

Photo

Photo of Dorothy Horstmann, Yale.

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References

  1. Altman, Lawrence K. "Dr. Dorothy Horstmann, 89; Made Strides in Polio Research", The New York Times, January 21, 2001. Accessed January 21, 2001.
  2. Oshinsky, David M. "Breaking the back of polio" Archived July 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Yale Medicine, Autumn 2005. Accessed September 27, 2010.
  3. Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale: A Yale Tercentennial Exhibit Archived June 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Yale School of Medicine. Accessed September 26, 2010.
  4. Berliner, Robert W. "Scientific essays on infectious diseases in honor of Dorothy M. Horstmann, M.D.", Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine, 1982 May–Aug; 55(3-4): 161–389. Accessed September 26, 2010.
  5. Carleton, Heather A. (June 2011). "Putting Together the Pieces of Polio: How Dorothy Horstmann Helped Solve the Puzzle". The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 84 (2): 83–89. ISSN 0044-0086. PMC 3117421. PMID 21698038.
  6. Staff. "Dr. Dorothy Horstmann dies - key in development of polio vaccine" Archived 2010-07-14 at the Wayback Machine, Yale Bulletin & Calendar, January 26, 2001. Volume 29, Number 16. Accessed September 26, 2010.
  7. Hevesi, Dennis. "Robert W. McCollum, Dean of Dartmouth Medical School, Dies at 85", The New York Times, September 25, 2010. Accessed September 26, 2010.
  8. Medicine at Yale, 1960-2010 Archived August 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Yale University. Accessed September 27, 2010.
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