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  1. Louise Pearce (March 5, 1885 – August 10, 1959) was an American pathologist at the Rockefeller Institute who helped develop a treatment for African sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis).

  2. Louise Pearce, M.D., a physician and pathologist, was one of the foremost women scientists of the early 20th century. Her research with pathologist Wade Hampton Brown led to a cure for trypanosomiasis (African Sleeping sickness) in 1919.

  3. Louise Pearce, M.D., a physician and pathologist, was one of the foremost women scientists of the early 20th century. Her research with pathologist Wade Hampton Brown led to a cure for trypanosomiasis (African Sleeping sickness) in 1919.

  4. Apr 4, 2016 · In 1913, the Rockefeller Institute appointed its first woman researcher, Louise Pearce, M.D., who worked as an assistant to Simon Flexner. Pearce was promoted to Associate Member in 1923, and continued in this position until 1951, when she became President of the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania.

  5. Jan 21, 2014 · Dr Louise Pearce volunteered to travel alone to the colony to test out a drug she believed could help cure victims. For decades, the drug, Tryparsamide remained the standard treatment for...

  6. Louise Pearce, one of the central participants in the development and testing of tryparsamide to treat sleeping sickness, was born in Winchester, Massachusetts, on March 5, 1885, the only daughter of Susan Elizabeth Hoyt and Charles Ellis Pearce, who ran a tobacco and cigar business.

  7. Mar 2, 2024 · In 1920 Louise Pearce (1885-1959) traveled to the Belgian Congo (now Democratic Republic of the Congo) to field test a new drug against trypanosomiasis, or African sleeping sickness. This fatal disease, caused by a blood parasite, was epidemic.