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Yale University School of Medicine - then named the Medical Institution
of Yale College - is established and formally opens in 1813 with
four professors and a handful of students. Classes are held and
students housed in a building on the corner of Grove and Prospect
Streets across the street from the Grove Street Cemetery. |
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1833 |
The State Hospital - eventually known as the Yale-New Haven Hospital
- opens with room for 75 patients in a building between Cedar and
Howard Streets. |
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1860 |
The Medical Institution moves
closer to the hospital, to 150 York Street. |
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1879 |
The State Assembly approves
a charter to incorporate the Medical Department of Yale College,
giving the president and fellows of Yale College the right to determine
the qualifications for the M.D. degree. The Medical Department
of Yale College establishes a mandatory three-year graded program
for the M.D. degree. |
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1886 |
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1894 |
Yale Medical Journal publishes
its first issue. |
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1901 |
The New Haven Dispensary,
used for clinical teaching since 1879, moves to the corner of Cedar
and Congress Street. The building, today known as the Hope Building,
is funded by a bequest in memory of Jane Ellen Hope. |
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1915 |
Yale establishes the country's
first academic program in public health. |
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1916 |
Yale admits first women to
Medical School: Louise Farnam and Helen May Scoville, who is later
hired by Yale as an instructor in surgery and pathology. |
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1917 |
Brady Laboratory opens. |
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Yale Medical School emerges
as one of the top medical schools in the country. |
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1925 |
Sterling Hall of Medicine
building is completed, taking on its present appearance with the
addition of the Institute of Human Relations wing in 1931. |
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1931 |
Sterling bequest builds the
Yale Medical Library with its magnificent Historical Library. |
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1949 |
William H. Sewall, Jr., a
third year medical student at Yale, develops the first artificial
heart pump which is now displayed at the Smithsonian. |
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1955 |
Edward S. Harkness Memorial
Hall, the residence hall for medical students, is completed. |
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1957 |
Dr. Orvan Hess develops the
fetal heart monitor. |
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1958 |
The Hunter Radiation Therapy
Center is dedicated.

Yale-New Haven Medical Center incorporated. |
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1961 |
Dr. Dorothy M. Horstmann becomes
Yale's first woman professor. She and Dr. John Rodman Paul develop
and test live vaccines against polio and rubella.

The Laboratory of Epidemiology and Public Health opens. |
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1965 |
New affiliation agreement
between Yale University and Grace-New Haven Community Hospital
resulted in a Hospital name change to Yale-New Haven Hospital. |
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1970 |
Physician Associates Program
established. |
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1975 |
1975 Yale rheumatologist Dr.
Stephen E. Malawista and Allen Steere identify and name Lyme disease. |
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1980's |
Dr. Stephen Wardlaw and Robert
Levine invent the QBC (quantitative buffy coat analysis) test for
malaria, the most widely used method of hematological analysis
in physicians' offices worldwide. |
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1983 |
Yale opens the first AIDS
clinic in the state. |
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1984 |
Yale establishes New England's
first skin bank. |
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1987 |
Dr. Richard Edelson develops
and uses photopheresis, an innovative treatment used to treat cutaneous
T cell lymphoma, scleroderma and graft vs. host disease in transplant
patients. |
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1988 |
Yale Physicians Building on
Howard Street opens. |
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1991 |
Boyer Center for Molecular
Medicine opens, an interdisciplinary center for molecular research
for understanding disease. |
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1994 |
AIDS drug (Zerit), discovered
by Dr. William Prusoff, is brought to market. |
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1999 |
Lyme vaccine (LYMErix), discovered
by Richard A. Flavell, Ph.D., Fred S. Kantor, M.D., Erol Fikrig,
M.D., and Stephen W. Barthold, D.V.M., PhD, hits the market. |
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