A History of Firsts
Yale has a history of contributions to the field of medicine that have had a major impact on the health of people around the world. Some of these are:
1896 | Arthur Wright produces first X-ray |
1942 | Introduction of life-saving penicillin to the United States |
1942 | First use of chemotherapy as a cancer treatment in the U.S. |
1946 | First U.S. hospital to allow healthy newborns to say in rooms with mother. |
1947 | Yale-New Haven Hospital opens the first rheumatic fever-cardiac clinic, one of the nation's first regional heart centers |
1949 | Developed first artificial heart pump in the U.S. |
1949 | First U.S. hospital to introduce natural childbirth as a general service |
1957 | First hospital to use fetal heart monitoring |
1958 | Discovery of melatonin |
1959 | First antiviral drug developed |
1960 | World's first intensive care unit for newborns |
1966 | Phrenic nerve pacemaker allows quadriplegics to breathe without a respirator |
1966 | "Morning-After" birth control pill developed |
1972 | First hospital-based newborn screening program for sickle cell anemia in the U.S. |
1975 | Lyme disease identified and named |
1978 | FDA approved timolol to treat glaucoma, the first effective therapy for the disease since the early 1900s |
1979 | First insulin pump for diabetes |
1980 | The first genetically modified mouse (these are now used in the early stages of research to develop treatment for diseases |
1985 | First fetal cardiovascular center in the U.S. |
1994 | FDA approved Zerit, a drug to treat HIV and part of the three-drug “cocktail” that extended the lives of many tens of thousands of people with HIV/AIDS worldwide |
1997 | The discovery of a mechanism of protein folding, a step toward understanding neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease |
1997 | First documented heart transplants of adult identical twins, one in 1992, second in 1997 |
2010 | First to use high-throughput DNA sequencing to diagnose a disease |
2014 | Genomic analysis leads to the discovery, diagnosis, and treatment of a rare disease |