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Gerhard Henrik Armauer Hansen (Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈɡæ̂rhɑɖ ɑrˈmæ̀ʉər ˈhɑ̂nsn̩]; 29 July 1841 – 12
February 1912) was a
Norwegian physician, remembered...
- The
species was
discovered in 1873 by the
Norwegian physician Gerhard Armauer Hansen, and was the
first bacterium to be
identified as a
cause of disease...
-
Hospital (Sankt Jørgens Hospital) in Bergen. He
later worked with
Gerhard Armauer Hansen,
discovering the
bacteria causing leprosy, and made
Bergen a world...
- term "Hansen's disease" is
named after the
Norwegian physician Gerhard Armauer Hansen.
Leprosy has
historically been ****ociated with
social stigma, which...
-
educator and
government official. He
currently serves as
Director General of
Armauer Hansen Research Institute (AHRI) of the
Federal Democratic Republic of...
- Institute,
which publishes the Asia
Pacific Journal of
Human Resources Armauer Hansen Research Institute at
ALERT (medical facility),
Ethiopia Arts and...
- the
disease is now
referred to as Hansen's disease,
named after Gerhard Armauer Hansen who
discovered Mycobacterium leprae, the
bacterial agent that causes...
- for
medical students from
Addis Ababa University. Also at
ALERT is the
Armauer Hansen Research Institute (AHRI),
founded in 1970,
specializing in leprosy...
- Körber,
German pastor, composer, and
conductor (d. 1893) 1841 –
Gerhard Armauer Hansen,
Norwegian physician (d. 1912) 1843 –
Johannes Schmidt,
German linguist...
- the New World, and from
Africa into
Europe and vice versa. In 1873 G.H.
Armauer Hansen in
Norway discovered the
causative agent of leprosy, Mycobacterium...