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Fred & Marjorie: A Doctor, a Dog, and the…
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Fred & Marjorie: A Doctor, a Dog, and the Discovery of Insulin (editie 2021)

door Deborah Kerbel (Auteur)

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1731,244,599 (4.1)Geen
"One hundred years ago, juvenile diabetes was a death sentence for millions of people around the world, most of them children. this book tells the story the discovery of insulin, a treatment for this disease and one of the most impactful milestones in medical science. Frederick Banting was a young doctor who was haunted by the memories of the diabetic children he'd treated at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. One night, though, he was struck by inspiration--would it be possible to isolate the mysterious secretions of the pancreas (what we now call insulin) and use this substance to treat diabetes? In May 1921, the University of Toronto gave Banting a small lab and a student assistant, Charles Best, to work through Banting's hypothesis. Their test subjects were street dogs--a fact that pained Banting, who had a deep fondness for animals. Banting and Best took exceptional care of the dogs, and Banting ended up giving one the dogs a name -- Marjorie. And when Marjorie--whose pancreas had been replaced by insulin injections--lived 70 days, the experiment was deemed a success. The next step was to try the treatment on a dying child. The effects of insulin on the first human diabetic patient were deemed practically miraculous. However, many dogs did die for this to happen, including Marjorie, whom Banting described as "the most important dog in the world." The back matter includes an Author's Note that provides more information about the disease, as well as about Banting, Best and the insulin dogs. Another section addresses the ethical dilemma of using animals in medical research."--… (meer)
Lid:arak
Titel:Fred & Marjorie: A Doctor, a Dog, and the Discovery of Insulin
Auteurs:Deborah Kerbel (Auteur)
Info:Owlkids (2021), 56 pages
Verzamelingen:Non-Fiction, Jouw bibliotheek
Waardering:***1/2
Trefwoorden:Youth, Graphic Novels, History, Medicine, Research, Diabetes, Dogs, Animal Testing, W

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Fred & Marjorie: A Doctor, a Dog, and the Discovery of Insulin door Deborah Kerbel

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This is one of those books that takes us out of the bubble of pretending that animals don't die every day in service to humans -- as test subjects, as food, as collateral damage -- and while I don't rejoice in that knowledge, I am grateful for it. I was not expecting this when I picked up the book. I appreciate that it is a clear explanation about the history of Diabetes and the discovery of Insulin. I also appreciate that it's a tremendously good book about the history of medicine. I appreciate that it doesn't shy away from tough subjects, and that Fred mourned his test subjects. It's almost more of a picture book than a graphic novel, so I don't think of it as a particularly deep level of narrative or character development. ( )
  jennybeast | Jun 21, 2023 |
Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
  fernandie | Sep 14, 2022 |
This book was so heartfelt and made me jump for joy. I would have never known how the diabetes treatment was discovered if I had not read this and I can relate to it because my grandpa was diabetic before he passed away.
Fred Bantling worked as a surgeon in a children's hospital in the 1920s when there was no cure for diabetes and it was considered a terminal illness. He opened his practice after his residency was up and things were slow so he taught at a school (college/university) where he was required to teach a lesson about the pancreas. The more research he did for this lesson the more he got an idea of what the pancreas's purpose was and what was in the pancreas. He then got an idea to perform a study/experiment on a dog by removing the pancreas from a dog extracting what every was inside that related to diabetes and injecting it with the substance. As the study continued he ended up picking up a stray dog and using her for the experiment but Fred was attached to her. He named the Stray dog Marjorie and she ended up living 70 days without a pancreas but sadly had to die because they did not have enough medicine to keep her alive and help the children with Diabetes. ( )
  MakenzieOpat | Mar 9, 2022 |
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"One hundred years ago, juvenile diabetes was a death sentence for millions of people around the world, most of them children. this book tells the story the discovery of insulin, a treatment for this disease and one of the most impactful milestones in medical science. Frederick Banting was a young doctor who was haunted by the memories of the diabetic children he'd treated at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. One night, though, he was struck by inspiration--would it be possible to isolate the mysterious secretions of the pancreas (what we now call insulin) and use this substance to treat diabetes? In May 1921, the University of Toronto gave Banting a small lab and a student assistant, Charles Best, to work through Banting's hypothesis. Their test subjects were street dogs--a fact that pained Banting, who had a deep fondness for animals. Banting and Best took exceptional care of the dogs, and Banting ended up giving one the dogs a name -- Marjorie. And when Marjorie--whose pancreas had been replaced by insulin injections--lived 70 days, the experiment was deemed a success. The next step was to try the treatment on a dying child. The effects of insulin on the first human diabetic patient were deemed practically miraculous. However, many dogs did die for this to happen, including Marjorie, whom Banting described as "the most important dog in the world." The back matter includes an Author's Note that provides more information about the disease, as well as about Banting, Best and the insulin dogs. Another section addresses the ethical dilemma of using animals in medical research."--

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