Dr.Patricia Bath
Sunday 6 January 2013
Her Career
After completing her education, Bath served briefly as an assistant professor at Jules Stein Eye Institute at UCLA and Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science before becoming the first woman on faculty at the Eye Institute. In 1978, Bath co-founded the American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness, for which she served as president. In 1983, she became the head of a residency in her field at Charles R. Drew, the first woman ever to head such a department.In 1993, she retired from UCLA, which subsequently elected her the first woman on its honorary staff. She served as a professor of Ophthalmology at Howard University's School of Medicine and as a professor of Telemedicine and Ophthalmology at St. Georges University.She was among the co-founders of the King-Drew Medical Center ophthalmology training program.
Thursday 27 December 2012
Saturday 22 December 2012
Her patents
Patricia Bath's U.S. patents:
Pat. No. 4,7443,60: Apparatus for ablating and removing cataract lenses, issued 17 May 1988.
Pat. No. 5,843,071: Method and apparatus for ablating and removing cataract lenses, issued 1 December 1998.
Pat. No. 5,919,186: Laser apparatus for surgery of cataractous lenses, issued 6 July 1999.
Pat. No. 6,083,192: Pulsed ultrasound method for fragmenting/emulsifying and removing cataractous lenses, issued 4 July 2000.
http://invention.smithsonian.org/centerpieces/ilives/bath/bath.html
Women inventors in Patricia Bath’s time period
How
women in Patricia’s time period, field of study and Culture used Technology[1]
There were many women inventors in
Patricia Bath’s time period. For example, Virginia Apagar invented a very
useful tool for women during her time. She was born in 1909 and died in 1974
and was a professor of anesthesiology at the New York Columbia-Presbyterian
Medical Center. Her invention was the Apgar scale which she created in 1953.
This is a simple, standardized scale that was used to check the physical status
of a baby right after being born. It checks the heart rate, respiration, muscle
tone, reflex response, and color and is usually done after one minute of being
born and then again after five minutes of being born. While these tests are
being done, the doctor is quickly alerted if the baby needs help. I’m sure this
invention has saved many babies since being created and continues to do so
today. Another female inventor of that time was Gertrude Elion. She was born
January 23, 1918 and died February 21, 1999. She was a Nobel Prize winning
biochemist who invented many drugs. Some of these drugs included 6-thioguanine
which fights leukemia, Imuran, Zovirax, and many others. She was named on 45
patents for drugs and since these drugs were invented, has saved thousands of
people.
I also found that there were many
African American women who invented technologies. One woman named Sarah Goode
invented a folding cabinet bed in 1885. This cabinet folded up against the
wall, but when folded, it was used as a desk with compartments. She was a
business woman who owned a furniture store in Chicago and invented this bed for
people living in small apartments. Her patent was the first one obtained by an
African-American woman inventor (Zoom Inventors and Inventions). Another
African-American woman was Madame C.J. Walker. She was an inventor, business
woman, and self-made millionaire. She created many beauty and hair care
products. She started her cosmetics business in 1905 and the first product she
released was a scalp treatment that used petrolatum and sulphur. Her products
became very popular so she started selling door-to-door. Because of its
popularity, she added many new products to her line and soon had saleswomen who
sold her products door-to-door and to beauty salons and called them “Walker
Agents” (Zoom Inventors and Inventions).
There were many women who used
technology in Patricia Bath’s field of medicine. One woman named Ida Henrietta
Hyde who lived from 1857 to 1945 was an American physiologist who invented the
microelectrode in the 1930s. This device electrically stimulates a living cell
and records the electrical activity within that cell (Zoom Inventors and
Inventions). Ida was the first woman to graduate from the University of
Heidelberg, to do research at the Harvard Medical School and to be elected to
the American Physiological Society (Zoom Inventors and Inventions). Another
woman named Rosalyn S. Yalow co-invented the radioimmunoassay in 1959. What
this did was chemically analyze human blood and tissue. It is used to diagnose
illnesses, such as diabetes. This invention revolutionalized diagnoses because
it uses only a tiny sample of blood or tissue and is inexpensive and simple to
use. It can detect drug use, high blood pressure, infertility, and many others.
In 1977, she won a Nobel Prize in Medicine for inventing this.
[1] http://willettt.wordpress.com/culture-site/how-women-in-patricias-time-period-field-of-study-and-culture-used-technology/
Woman inventor
Patricia Bath – An African American Woman
Inventor
When I think of inventions, what comes to mind
are those that we use everyday, such as computers or electricity. Inventions
can be any new kind of technology though, so it can be something small like a
swivel chair to something more important such as a medical technology. People
have been inventing things for hundreds of years, but men tend to get the most
recognition. Many women have contributed many technologies, such as sewing
machines and medical technologies. It has become amazing what people can create
to help us in our everyday lives. Medical technologies have especially been
helpful in letting us live longer. Inventions such as birth control for women
now help us to plan exactly when we want to have children, rather than having
to plan everything else around suddenly being pregnant. It’s even come so far
as doctors letting us choose the sex of our baby. Sometimes I wonder where we
would be without technology; how would we live without computers making our
lives easier or how our lives would be different without telephones,
televisions, or vehicles. Our lives are so much easier than five hundred years
ago and who knows where we’ll be in another five hundred years. What I decided
to concentrate on for my project was an African-American woman who invented a
very important medical technology and has accomplished a lot with this
invention in her life. She is still alive so this invention is still relatively
new, but has had a major impact on blind people and has greatly improved eye
surgery. This woman’s name is Patricia Bath and she invented the Cataract
Laserphaco Probe that vaporizes cataracts from a person’s eyes quickly and
painlessly.
Bath's early life
Patricia Bath’s early life [1]
Patricia Era Bath was born on November 4, 1942, in Harlem, New
York, to Rupert Bath, the first black motorman for the New York City subway
system, and Gladys Bath, a housewife and domestic worker who used her salary to
save money for her children's education. Bath was encouraged by her family to
pursue academic interests. Her father, a former Merchant Marine and an
occasional newspaper columnist, taught Bath about the wonders of travel and the
value of exploring new cultures. Her mother piqued the young girl's interest in
science by buying her a chemistry set.
As a result, Bath worked hard on her intellectual pursuits and,
at the age of 16, became one of only a few students to attend a cancer research
workshop sponsored by the National Science Foundation. The program head, Dr.
Robert Bernard, was so impressed with Bath's discoveries during the project
that he incorporated her findings in a scientific paper he presented at a
conference. The publicity surrounding her discoveries earned Bath the Mademoiselle
magazine's Merit Award in 1960.
After graduating from high school in only two years, Bath headed
to Hunter College, where she earned a bachelor's degree in 1964. She then
attended Howard University to pursue a medical degree. Bath graduated with
honors from Howard in 1968, and accepted an internship at Harlem Hospital
shortly afterward. The following year, she also began pursuing a fellowship in
ophthalmology at Columbia University. Through her studies there, she discovered
that African Americans were twice as likely to suffer from blindness than other
patients to which she attended, and eight times more likely to develop
glaucoma. Her research led to her development of a community ophthalmology
system, which increased the amount of eye care given to those who were unable
to afford treatment.
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