The building up of a culture of standardization at the Institut Pasteur, 1885-1900
Résumé
The present paper thus primarily deals with the manner a “culture of quantification and standardization” has been introduced at the Institut Pasteur or, more precisely, has been imposed by Emile Roux (1853-1933) and his co-workers, as part of Roux's general project on the approach to infectious diseases, based on the direct coupling of research in microbiology to the production of drugs of biological or chemical origin by the institute, and to medical care in Pasteur's hospital located on the campus itself.
Mots clés
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur
anthrax bacilli
anti-diphtheria serum
Hans Aronson
Behring
Albert Calmette
Ian Chalmers
Chamberland
diphtheria
infectious diseases
Emile Duclaux
Paul Ehrlich
Johannes Fibinger
Jacques-Joseph Grancher
Hôpital des Enfants-malades
immunology
Institut Pasteur
Klebs-Loeffler bacillus
Robert Koch
Friedrich Loefler
Eugène Macé
Louis Martin
Metchnikoff
microbiology
Edmond Nocard
Pierre Parisot
Louis Pasteur
Pfeiffer
Alexis Prévot
rabies
Gaston Ramon
Emile Roux
serum-therapy
serotherapy
standardization
staphylococci
syphilis
tetanus
therapeutic chemistry
tuberculosis
vaccine againt rabies
Erich Wernicke
Alexandre Yersin
Origine : Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s)
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