Virginia Apgar - translation to french
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Virginia Apgar - translation to french

AMERICAN OBSTETRICAL ANESTHESIOLOGIST (1909-1974)
The Virginia Apgar Award; Apgar, Virginia; Virginia Abgar
  • Virginia Apgar with self-made violin (60s)
  • alt=Dr. Virginia Apgar, standing, facing right, examining baby with stethoscope.
  • Virginia Apgar on the President's Committee on Employment of the Handicapped (November 28, 1973)
  • Virginia Apgar standing in a field and playing the violin in 1920

Virginia Apgar         
Virginia Apgar (1909-1974), United States physician who developed the Apgar score test (in 1952), to evaluate the physical state of newborns
Apgar         
Apgar, family name; Virginia Apgar (1909-1974), United States physician who developed the Apgar score test (in 1952), to evaluate the physical state of newborns

Definition

Apgar score
['apg?]
¦ noun Medicine a number expressing the physical condition of a newborn infant (a score of ten representing the best possible condition).
Origin
1960s: named after the American anaesthesiologist Virginia Apgar.

Wikipedia

Virginia Apgar

Virginia Apgar (June 7, 1909 – August 7, 1974) was an American physician of Armenian ethnic background, obstetrical anesthesiologist and medical researcher, best known as the inventor of the Apgar Score, a way to quickly assess the health of a newborn child immediately after birth in order to combat infant mortality. In 1952, she developed the 10-point Apgar score to assist physicians and nurses in assessing the status of newborns. Given at one minute and five minutes after birth, the Apgar test measures a child's breathing, skin color, reflexes, motion, and heart rate. A friend said, "She probably did more than any other physician to bring the problem of birth defects out of back rooms." She was a leader in the fields of anesthesiology and teratology, and introduced obstetrical considerations to the established field of neonatology.