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Zvonka Zupanič Slavec

    Grenzüberschreitende Medizin zwischen Ljubljana und Wien
    Tuberculosis (1860 - 1960)
    New Method of Identifying Family Related Skulls
    • New Method of Identifying Family Related Skulls

      Forensic Medicine, Anthropology, Epigenetics

      • 243pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      If DNA cannot be isolated, don't give up the identification! The author has used for the same purpose methods ranging from physical anthropology to forensic medicine and especially a recent method of comparison of epigenetic traits, which proved to be very useful for the identification of family related skulls in connection with historical and other data. The kinship of 18 identified skulls (buried together in a family vault) is established by comparison of X-ray images of paranasal cavities (frontal and maxillary sinuses, orbital and nasal cavities), the shape and size of which are strongly genetically determined. The comparison also extends to numerous other epigenetic trait similarities on the skulls. It is recommended for: scientists working on human identification and studying heredity, forensic scientists, physical anthropologists, radiologists, stomatologists, paleopathologists, geneticists, historians and many others.

      New Method of Identifying Family Related Skulls
    • Tuberculosis (1860 - 1960)

      • 167pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      This book narrates the efforts of Slovenian and international communities, public healthcare, and policy to combat tuberculosis, a significant socioeconomic disease in the late 19th and 20th centuries. It chronicles the journey toward effective anti-tuberculosis treatments discovered in the 1950s, which diminished the disease's prevalence in developed nations. The narrative centers on the Slovenian tuberculosis sanatorium at Golnik, which laid the groundwork for a standardized approach to treating and containing tuberculosis among the twenty million people in Yugoslavia at that time. The Slovenian experience is compared with similar efforts in Austria, Italy, and Croatia, highlighting the interplay of medical treatment with social, economic, and political factors that influence the spread of such diseases. The struggle against tuberculosis is set against the backdrop of two political systems: post-World War I, when Austro-Hungarian healthcare influenced Slovenia, and the introduction of socialized medicine in the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, led by Andrija Štampar. His initiatives promoted community responsibility for health and disease prevention through measures like quarantines and education, which significantly lowered tuberculosis rates even before antibiotics were available. After 1945, a publicly funded healthcare system in Yugoslavia bolstered mass campaigns against tuberculosis, leading to a dramatic re

      Tuberculosis (1860 - 1960)