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  1. Walter Reed
    American physician and medical researcher

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  1. Apr 5, 2024 · Walter Reed (born September 13, 1851, Belroi, Virginia, U.S.—died November 22, 1902, Washington, D.C.) was a U.S. Army pathologist and bacteriologist who led the experiments that proved that yellow fever is transmitted by the bite of a mosquito.

  2. Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (WRNMMC; formerly known as the National Naval Medical Center and colloquially referred to as Bethesda Naval Hospital, Walter Reed, or Navy Med) is a United States military medical center located in Bethesda, Maryland.

  3. Feb 5, 2021 · Walter Reed — just about anyone who hears that name can connect it to the world’s largest joint military medical system.

  4. U.S. Army surgeon Major Walter Reed and his discovery of the causes of yellow fever is one of the most important contributions in the field of medicine and human history. During the Spanish-American war, more American soldiers died from yellow fever, malaria, and other diseases than from combat.

  5. Sep 13, 2017 · Health Sep 13, 2017 2:14 PM EDT. There was a time when every school child could recite the tale of how Maj. Walter Reed proved the Cuban physician Carlos Finlay’s theory that mosquitoes ...

  6. Walter Reed is known today for the Army medical center that bears his name. But a century ago he was known as the Army officer who helped defeat one of the great enemies of the time: yellow fever ...

  7. Sep 6, 2018 · U.S. Army Maj. Walter Reed (1851-1902) (NCP 0597) Maj. Walter Reeds celebrated research into the causes of typhoid and yellow fever—including the landmark discovery that yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes—has saved countless human lives. In 1893, Reed became curator of the Army Medical Museum (now the National Museum of Health and ...

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