Scotland’s medical history is a testament to a small nation’s massive global impact.
From the pioneering antiseptic methods at Glasgow Royal Infirmary to the first successful mammal cloning (Dolly the Sheep), during the Scottish Enlightenment, the prestigious University of Edinburgh Medical School, became the medical capital of the world, fostering a spirit of rigorous inquiry and clinical excellence.
The pioneers of antiseptic surgery, anesthesia, and tropical medicine who emerged from the Scottish tradition of 'common sense' philosophy and scientific rigor.
The discovery of insulin to the development of MRI technology, continues to save lives and inspire innovation worldwide.
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DR. JOHN ABERCROMBIE (1780 - 1844)
DR. JAMES ADAMS (1818 - 1899)
DR. THOMAS CHALMERS ADDIS (1881 - 1949)
DR. JOHN AITKEN ( ? - 1790)
DR. SIR WILLIAM AITKEN (1825 - 1892)
DR. DOUGLAS MORAY COOPER LAMB ARGYLL ROBERTSON (1837 - 1908)
DR. GEORGE WILLIAM BALFOUR (1823 - 1903)
DR. JOHN HUTTON BALFOUR (1808 - 1884)
DR. JOHN WILLIAM BALLANTYNE (1861 - 1923)
DR. GEORGE BALLINGALL (1780 - 1855)
DR. JAMES BEGBIE (1798 - 1869)
DR. CHARLES BELL (1774 - 1842)
DR. GEORGE ANDREAS BERRY (1853 - 1940)
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