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  1. Miembro de la Academia Estadounidense de las Artes y las Ciencias. [ editar datos en Wikidata] Walter Channing ( Newport, 15 de abril de 1786-27 de julio de 1876) fue un médico y profesor de medicina estadounidense. 1 .

  2. 11 de abr. de 2024 · Walter Channing (born April 15, 1786, Newport, R.I.—died July 27, 1876, Brookline, Mass. U.S.) was a U.S. physician and one of the founders of the Boston Lying-In Hospital (1832). He was the first to use ether as an anesthetic in obstetrics and the first professor of obstetrics at Harvard University (1815). A graduate in medicine ...

  3. Walter Channing (April 15, 1786 – July 27, 1876) was an American physician and professor of medicine. He was the brother of preacher William Ellery Channing and of fellow Harvard professor (of Rhetoric), Edward Tyrrel Channing. He was also the father of the poet William Ellery Channing.

  4. Walter Channing. Brief life of a nineteenth-century obstetrician: 1786-1876. by Amalie M. Kass. March-April 2004. In a career spanning nearly six decades, Walter Channing provided the medical skills and compassionate care women sought as they faced the pain and dangers of childbirth.

  5. Dr. Walter Channing, Harvard's first professor of obstetrics and medical jurisprudence, was also Dean of the Medical School for over a quarter of a century. He promoted the use of ether anaesthesia in childbirth and was one of the founders and attending physicians at the Boston Lying-In Hospital.

  6. 13 de abr. de 2005 · This collection consists of the lectures, essays, case notes, and correspondence of Dr. Walter Channing, a Boston physician and pioneer in the field of obstetrics. Correspondents include his grandson Walter Channing, his brothers William Ellery and George Gibbs Channing, and his sister Lucy Channing Russel.

  7. Dr. Walter Channing, a leading obstetrician, was the Medical School's first professor of obstetrics and medical jurisprudence. He was a founder of the Boston Lying-in Hospital for women, now incorporated into Brigham and Women's Hospital, and one of the founders of the New England Journal of Medicine and Surgery. Dr.