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Sunday, March 2, 2008 3:30 PM, Convention Center 103
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- European Scientists Who Shaped Pathology
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Moderator:
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Jan G. van den Tweel, UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands
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Disclosure:
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In accordance with ACCME guidelines regarding disclosure, the USCAP policy requires that faculty members who have a significant financial or other relationship with a commercial company, entity, or service (which will be discussed in this Symposium) must disclose this to attendees. The Academy also requires that speakers disclose any products that are not labeled for the use under discussion. The speakers have indicated they have nothing to disclose.
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Click here to view (or print) handout in single page format for the entire meeting. Note: Any slides will be printed in color.

Click any blue title below to display and print the handout for individual lecture(s):
| 3:30 | Introduction - Jan G. van den Tweel, UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands |
| 3:35 | Morgagni and His Time - Jan G. van den Tweel, UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands |
| 3:50 | Virchow and German Pathology in the 19th Century - H. Konrad Mueller Hermelink, University of Wuezburg, Germany |
| 4:15 | Thomas Hodgkin and Other `Non-Pathologists' From the United Kingdom - Clive R. Taylor, Keck School of Medicine, USC, Los Angeles, CA |
| 4:40 | The Spread of European Pathology Around the World - Robin A. Cooke, Brisbane, Australia |
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The objective of this program is to present information on several major historical European figures
in pathology and discuss their influence in the context of the time in which they lived and worked. The
scientific basis for anatomic pathology was laid in Europe in the 18th and 19th Century.
Participants should gain insights and information on the contributions of these individuals in
establishing the scientific basis for anatomic pathology. |
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