Edwin O. Jordan

Edwin Jordan
Born (1866-07-28)July 28, 1866
Thomaston, Maine, US
Died September 2, 1936(1936-09-02) (aged 70)
Chicago, US
Nationality American
Fields Bacteriology

Edwin Oakes Jordan (also spelled as Jordon; July 28, 1866 – September 2, 1936)[1] was a prominent American bacteriologist and public health scientist.

Jordan’s scientific work began in 1888 right after his graduation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he had been a distinguished pupil of Professor William Thompson Sedgwick. He built the Department of Bacteriology at the University of Chicago. He was a meticulous researcher who produced "data of indisputable accuracy". "His analytic mind and unwillingness to draw conclusions except from sufficient data" are prominent in his reports on epidemics. He co-founded the Journal of Infectious Diseases, and was editor of the Journal of Preventive Medicine. He won the Sedgwick Memorial Medal in 1934. His textbook of bacteriology has gone through many editions.[2]

Perhaps his most lasting contribution of continuing interest today is the 1925 book Epidemic Influenza, which reviewed the data on the Great Pandemic of 1918 to ascertain its causes. Jordan concluded that the extreme overcrowding of troops in the American military not only helped to spread the infection but to also to make the flu germ itself more virulent, thus causing the unusually high death toll specific to that influenza epidemic.[3]

Jordan married Elsie Fay Pratt Jordan in 1893, and they had two sons, Henry Donaldson and Edwin Pratt, and a daughter Lucia Elizabeth Dunham.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 N. Paul Hudson (1937). "Edwin Oakes Jordan 1866–1936". J Bacteriol. 33 (3): i2–248. PMC 545386. PMID 16560002.
  2. Anonymous (1936). "Edwin Oakes Jordan". American Journal of Public Health 26: 1033–34. doi:10.2105/ajph.26.10.1033.
  3. Jordan, E.O. (1925). Epidemic Influenza. American Medical Association.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, January 29, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.