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  1. Neal D. Barnard

    Neal D. Barnard is an American physician, author, clinical researcher, and president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), a national network of physicians and lay supporters who promote preventive medicine, especially good nutrition, conduct clinical research, and promote higher standards in research. He is also president of the Cancer Project, an organization promoting cancer prevention, research, and nutritional assistance to patients.

  2. Julian Whitaker

    Julian Whitaker , MD, is a graduate of Dartmouth College and Emory University Medical School in Atlanta, Georgia. Since opening the Whitaker Wellness Institute in Newport Beach, California, in 1979, he and his staff have successfully treated approximately 40,000 patients with his unique program of diet, exercise, nutritional supplements, and noninvasive therapies.

  3. James Lind

    James Lind was the pioneer of naval hygiene in the Royal Navy. By conducting what was perhaps the first ever clinical trial, he proved that citrus fruits cure scurvy. He also proposed that by distilling sea water you could obtain fresh water. Moreover he fought for the drying of ships by better ventilation, improved clothing and cleanliness of the sailors and introduced fumigaton with sulphur and arsenic.

  4. Earl Mindell

    Earl Lawrence Mindell is a Canadian-American writer and nutritionist who currently resides in Beverly Hills, California. He is a prolific writer who has authored over 45 books on health and wellness, and is a strong advocate of nutrition as both preventive and homeopathic medicine. His most notable publication, "Earl Mindell's Vitamin Bible", is a glossary of micronutrients published in 1979 that was recently updated and re-released in 2004.

  5. Arthur B. Robinson

    Arthur B. Robinson is founder, president and professor of chemistry at the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, where he conducts research on protein chemistry and on nutrition and predictive and preventive medicine. He also sells the "Robinson Curriculum", which is a self-taught home school curriculum for grammar school children through high school.

  6. Robert S. Mendelsohn

    Robert S. Mendelsohn, MD, (b. 1926, d.1988) was an American pediatrician who criticized his profession, inveighing against pediatric practice, obstetric orthodoxy and the effect of the preponderance of male obstetricians, and vaccination. He also opposed water fluoridation, coronary bypass surgery, licensing of nutritionists, and the routine use of X-Rays. For 12 years, Mendelsohn was an instructor at Northwestern University Medical College, …

  7. Thomas Hodgkin

    Thomas Hodgkin (August 17, 1798 - April 5, 1866) was a British physician and considered one of the most prominent pathologists of his time and a pioneer in preventive medicine. He is now best known for the first account of Hodgkin's disease, a form of lymphoma and blood disease, in 1832. Hodgkin's work marked the beginning of times when a pathologist was actively involved in the clinical process. He was a contemporary of Thomas Addison and Richard Bright at Guy's Hospital.

  8. Almroth Wright

    Sir Almroth Edward Wright (1861-1947) was a British bacteriologist and immunologist. He is best known for advancing vaccination through the use of autogenous vaccines (prepared from the bacteria harboured by the patient) and also through typhoid vaccination with typhoid bacilli killed by heat. In the 19th century, he worked with the armed forces of Britain to develop vaccines and promote immunisation.

  9. Dennis Chernin

    Dennis K. Chernin, M.D., M.P.H. is a doctor and author specializing in the fields of holistic medicine, yoga and stress reduction. He is the medical director of two county health departments, and is a lecturer at the University of Michigan Medical School in the Complementary and Alternative Medicine program. He has actively practiced and taught meditation and breathing techniques for thirty years. His teachers were trained in the Himalayan mountains in India, Nepal, …

  10. Hermann Biggs

    Hermann Michael Biggs (September 29, 1859 - June 28, 1923) was an American physician and pioneer in the field of public health who helped apply the science of bacteriology to the prevention and control of infectious diseases. He was born at Trumansburg, N. Y. Educated at Cornell University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, he became lecturer and professor of pathological anatomy in the latter institution in 1885.

  11. Cyril Clarke

    Sir Cyril Astley Clarke (22 August 1907-21 November 2000) was a British physician, lepidopterist and geneticist. He is well known for his pionering work on prevention of Rh disease of the newborn, and also for his work on butterfly and moth genetics. Cyril Clarke's school education was at Wyggestson Grammar School in Leicester and Oundle School near Peterborough. His interest in butterflies and moths began at school.

  12. Fred Bass

    Fred Bass is a former Vancouver city councillor, environmentalist and a preventive medicine physician.

  13. Abram Salmon Benenson

    Abram Salmon Benenson, MD was an authority in public health, preventive medicine, military medicine, and "shoe-leather" epidemiology. He was best known as the editor-in-chief (1970 to 1995) for the "Control of Communicable Diseases Manual" of the American Public Health Association. His tenure as editor was so lengthy that the manual was often known as the "Benenson Book". Dr Benenson graduated from Cornell Medical School, Ithaca, New York, …

  14. Dr Gustav Schonfeld MD
  15. Erica Frank

    Yup So I definetly needed to update this - to busy working (WEAP or WI Early Autism Project) and Appts./ERT and watching my Nephews to get much else done! If you really want to know what is going on in my life go to my CB site WWW/CARINGBRIDGE.ORG.WI/ERICATHIEL Not a heck of a lot else knew possibly going back to HH infusions in a few weeks. Yeh hooray.

  16. Dr Jeffrey Powell Koplan MD

    Dr. Jeffrey P. Koplan is Vice President for Academic Health Affairs at Emory University. His public health career has included serving as Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the nation’s chief disease prevention agency (1998–2002). He also served as the CDC’s first director of its National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion and as a U.S. Assistant Surgeon General (1989–94).

  17. Dr Meir J Stampfer MD

    Meir Stampfer , MD, DrPH is Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health where he has served, since 2000, as Chair of the Department of Epidemiology. Dr. Stampfer is principal investigator for several grants from the National Cancer Institute and Prostate Cancer Foundation.

  18. Dr Joan Marie Colfer MD
  19. Dr Gilbert Stanley Omenn MD
  20. Jaime Peters

    its all mine (evil laugh)!!! dont touch -i bite!!

  21. Dr Alan Mark Steinman MD

    Admiral Steinman’s educational degrees include a Bachelor of Science in 1966 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; a Doctor of Medicine in 1971 from the Stanford University School of Medicine; and a Master of Public Health in 1986 from the University of Washington. His first post-graduate year in medicine was at the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine in Rochester, MN in 1971.

  22. Dr Joann Elisabeth Manson MD
  23. Dr Philip John Landrigan MD
  24. Dr Ralph S Paffenbarger Jr MD
  25. Dr Stefan Geoffrey Kertesz MD

    Stefan Kertesz , M.D.,M.Sc. served at the original Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon (West Africa) in 1992, and the experience spurred him to dedicate his career to understanding and improving the care of patients who encounter the healthcare system across boundaries of culture, language or socioeconomic disadvantage.

  26. Dr Jan McBarron MD
  27. Dr Terry Tadashi Shintani MD
  28. Dr Gail Ann Bolan MD
  29. Dr William Alan Yasnoff MD
  30. Dr Peter Blumenthal MD

    Dr. Peter Blumenthal is an occupational physician with training in pharmacology and toxicology and clinical experience in trauma. He learned injury management during 12,000 hours as an emergency physician. He learned to understand illnesses caused by toxic exposure during fellowship training in clinical pharmacology and toxicology. Therefore he is versed in the prevention and care of work related injuries and illnesses.

  31. Dr Irwin M Potash MD
  32. Dr Henri Andre Cuddihy MD
  33. Dr Helene Doris Gayle MD
  34. Dr Kurt Timothy Hegmann MD
  35. Dr Wayne Frederick Peate MD
  36. Dr Richard Arthur Lippin MD
  37. Bernard J. Turnock

    Bernard J. Turnock Clinical Professor, Community Health Sciences Director, Community Health Sciences

  38. Dr David Joseph Malebranche MD
  39. Dr William F Jessee MD
  40. Dr Walter Andrew Semkiw MD

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