Emma Sadler Moss
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
September 19, 1898
Emma S. Moss | |
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| Born | Emma Sadler September 19, 1898 |
| Died | April 30, 1970 (aged 71) |
| Education | Louisiana State University School of Medicine University of Alabama School of Medicine |
| Years active | 1939–1970 |
| Known for | First woman to serve as president of a major medical society in the U.S. |
| Medical career | |
| Field | Pathology |
| Institutions | Charity Hospital Louisiana State University School of Medicine |
| Sub-specialties | Parasitic, tropical, and mycotic diseases |
Emma Sadler Moss (1898–1970) was an American pathologist and medical educator. She specialized in parasitology, tropical, and mycotic diseases. She was president of the American Society for Clinical Pathology in 1955 and 1956. She was the first woman to serve as president of a major medical society in the United States. She was a professor at the Louisiana State University School of Medicine and served as director of pathology at Charity Hospital in New Orleans for 30 years. She co-authored the 1953 book Atlas of Medical Mycology.
Emma Sadler was born on September 19, 1898, in Pearlington, Mississippi, to Lou and Paul Sadler. She was born prematurely and was ill for much of her childhood. In 1915, she started her studies at the Mississippi State College for Women. She earned her BS in bacteriology in 1919.[1] She then started working as a medical technologist at Charity Hospital in New Orleans.[2]
In 1930, Moss undertook a two-year program at the University of Alabama School of Medicine. She then transferred to the Louisiana State University School of Medicine, earning her MD in 1935. She was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha honor society.[1] In 1939, she completed her residency in pathology at Charity Hospital in New Orleans.[3]
