2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocpiqo.2020.06.006
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Reciprocal Development and Progressive Responsibility: The History of the Mayo Clinic Neurology Residency

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Postgraduate training in neurology started to be available in some European countries and the United States already in the 19th century. Neurology residency programmes were established in the first decades of the 20th century in the United States (e.g., in 1919 at Mayo Clinic) and Europe (e.g., in 1931 in the Netherlands, in 1939 in Switzerland) [10,14].…”
Section: Europe An P Os Tg R Aduate (Re S Iden C Y ) Prog R Amme S In...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Postgraduate training in neurology started to be available in some European countries and the United States already in the 19th century. Neurology residency programmes were established in the first decades of the 20th century in the United States (e.g., in 1919 at Mayo Clinic) and Europe (e.g., in 1931 in the Netherlands, in 1939 in Switzerland) [10,14].…”
Section: Europe An P Os Tg R Aduate (Re S Iden C Y ) Prog R Amme S In...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The result of this delay was a very limited number of neurologists in most countries (e.g., two in Australia at the eve of the Second World War, 57 in in the UK in 1954 compared to 166 in 1956 in Switzerland) [6,10,15,16]. In the USA residency review committees were introduced in the 1950s and only 19 Americans became board-certified neurologists in 1960 [2,14,17] Passing the examination is considered as proof of excellence of a neurologist. Still, it is without legal value unless national authorities adopt it as equivalent to or instead of their national examination (e.g., Flanders in Belgium) or accept it as an exit examination if no national equivalent exists.…”
Section: Europe An P Os Tg R Aduate (Re S Iden C Y ) Prog R Amme S In...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…arry Lee Parker (1894e1959) was an American and Irish neurologist who reported unique paroxysmal symptoms in patients with multiple sclerosis, 1 and wrote a book on clinical neurology popular enough to be reprinted 13 years after initial publication. 2 Parker penned profiles of other physicians, [3][4][5] but his biography has only been touched on briefly in obituaries, 6,7 articles, 1,8,9 and books. [10][11][12][13] Following his advice that "a honeyed obituary is an insult to the dead (p. 596)," 5 we will describe in detail the life of Dr. Harry Lee Parker, using primary sources from the W. Bruce Fye Center for the History of Medicine at Mayo Clinic, the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland Archive, the Trinity College Dublin Manuscripts & Archives Research Library, other archives, and interviews of family members.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%