The Pasteur hospital as an element of Emile Roux’s anti-diphtheria apparatus (1890-1914)
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Show full item recordAuthor
Opinel, AnnickEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Materia
Difteria Francia Hospital Pasteur Seroterapia Higiene hospitalaria Diphtheria France Hôpital Pasteur Serotherapy Hospital hygiene
Date
2007Referencia bibliográfica
Opinel, Annick. «The Pasteur hospital as an element of Emile Roux’s anti-diphtheria apparatus (1890-1914)». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 2007, Vol. 27, p. 83-106, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/114299.
Abstract
Before the decisive discovery by Gaston Ramon of a vaccine («anatoxine diphtérique
») in 1923, the fight against diphtheria in France had started in 1894 with the serotherapy
approach of Martin and Roux. Emile Roux, director of the Institut Pasteur, developed a dynamic
concept of research/production/application expressed in the organization of a specialized
hospital, the Hôpital Pasteur, which was constructed near the research laboratories and also
incorporated production centres outside Paris in Marnes-la-Coquette. Roux implemented a
well-defined project against diphtheria that took account of all of the logistical implications. By
associating this therapeutic project with an architectural project, Roux established a coherent
anti-diphtheria apparatus.