The Romans were the first people to record health records. The ancient Greeks used therapies such as massage, act therapy, and herbal treatment.
Q. Why was Public Health Act 1875 introduced?
An Act for consolidating and amending the Acts relating to Public Health in England. Its purpose was to codify previous measures aimed at combating filthy urban living conditions, which caused various health threats, including the spread of many diseases such as cholera and typhus. …
Table of Contents
- Q. Why was Public Health Act 1875 introduced?
- Q. Who began public health and sanitation systems?
- Q. Who was the first to keep accurate medical records?
- Q. What helped medicine progress faster in the 20th century?
- Q. What new medical equipment was developed in the 20th century?
- Q. What 20th century discovery in medicine was the most important?
- Q. Who established the patterns of heredity?
- Q. What are the 3 principles of Mendelian genetics?
- Q. What was Gregor Mendel’s conclusion?
- Q. What are three characteristics of Mendelian traits?
- Q. What are examples of Mendelian traits?
- Q. What is the characteristics of Mendelian pattern of inheritance?
- Q. What is an example of a non Mendelian pattern of inheritance?
- Q. What are the 3 non-Mendelian inheritance?
- Q. What is the importance of non-Mendelian inheritance?
- Q. What is the difference between Mendelian and non-Mendelian patterns of inheritance?
- Q. What are the 4 patterns of inheritance?
- Q. What are the types of inheritance patterns?
- Q. Is height a Mendelian trait?
- Q. Is height a dominant trait?
- Q. Would a trait that has only two?
Q. Who began public health and sanitation systems?
Health Care Systems
Question | Answer |
---|---|
Public health and sanitation systems were first developed by the | ancient Romans |
The Father of Medicine | Hippocrates |
Bifocals for glasses were invented by | Benjamin Franklin |
A vaccination for smallpox was developed in 1796 by | Edward Jenner |
Q. Who was the first to keep accurate medical records?
35 Cards in this Set
Isolated radium in 1910 | Marie Curie |
---|---|
Earliest people known to maintain accurate health records | Egyptians |
Began pasteurizing milk to kill bacteria | Louis Pasteur |
Used acupuncture to relieve pain and congestion | Chinese |
Developed the culture plate method to identify pathogens | Robert Koch |
Q. What helped medicine progress faster in the 20th century?
The rapid progress of medicine in this era was reinforced by enormous improvements in communication between scientists throughout the world. Through publications, conferences, and—later—computers and electronic media, they freely exchanged ideas and reported on their endeavours.
Q. What new medical equipment was developed in the 20th century?
Development of X-Rays Not only can x-rays be used to identify diseases of the bone, they can also detect diseases of the soft tissue. Some of these diseases include pneumonia, kidney stones, and lung cancer. In the 20th century, a more efficient vacuum tube was developed for the x-ray machine to make it more efficient.
Q. What 20th century discovery in medicine was the most important?
The determination of DNA is widely regarded as the most important discovery of the 20th century in medicine and science. For this work, Crick and Watson were awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, sharing it with Maurice Wilkins (1916-).
Q. Who established the patterns of heredity?
Mendel tracked the segregation of parental genes and their appearance in the offspring as dominant or recessive traits. He recognized the mathematical patterns of inheritance from one generation to the next.
Q. What are the 3 principles of Mendelian genetics?
The key principles of Mendelian inheritance are summed up by Mendel’s three laws: the Law of Independent Assortment, Law of Dominance, and Law of Segregation.
Q. What was Gregor Mendel’s conclusion?
—and, after analyzing his results, reached two of his most important conclusions: the Law of Segregation, which established that there are dominant and recessive traits passed on randomly from parents to offspring (and provided an alternative to blending inheritance, the dominant theory of the time), and the Law of …
Q. What are three characteristics of Mendelian traits?
Examples of traits are the presence of freckles, blood type, hair color, and skin tone. Mendelian traits are traits that are passed down by dominant and recessive alleles of one gene.
Q. What are examples of Mendelian traits?
Mendelian Traits In Humans
Cleft chin (dominant) | Chin without a cleft (recessive) |
---|---|
Cheek dimples (dominant) | No cheek dimples (recessive) |
Wikimedia – C. Szeto | Ask A Biologist – Jacob Mayfield |
Free (dominant) earlobes | Attached (recessive) earlobes |
Wikimedia – David Benbennick | Wikimedia – Covalent |
Q. What is the characteristics of Mendelian pattern of inheritance?
Simple (or Mendelian) inheritance refers to the inheritance of traits controlled by a single gene with two alleles, one of which may be completely dominant to the other. The pattern of inheritance of simple traits depends on whether the traits are controlled by genes on autosomes or by genes on sex chromosomes.
Q. What is an example of a non Mendelian pattern of inheritance?
Genetic traits located on gonosomes sometimes show specific non-Mendelian inheritance patterns. Individuals can develop a recessive trait in the phenotype dependent on their sex—for example, colour blindness and haemophilia (see gonosomal inheritances).
Q. What are the 3 non-Mendelian inheritance?
Such modes of inheritance are called non-Mendelian inheritance, and they include inheritance of multiple allele traits, traits with codominance or incomplete dominance, and polygenic traits, among others, all of which are described below.
Q. What is the importance of non-Mendelian inheritance?
This is called Non-mendelian inheritance and it plays an important role in several disease processes. Non-mendelian inheritance can manifest as incomplete dominance, where offspring do not display traits of either parent but rather, a mix of both.
Q. What is the difference between Mendelian and non-Mendelian patterns of inheritance?
Non-Mendelian inheritance is any pattern of inheritance in which traits do not segregate in accordance with Mendel’s laws. These laws describe the inheritance of traits linked to single genes on chromosomes in the nucleus. In Mendelian inheritance, each parent contributes one of two possible alleles for a trait.
Q. What are the 4 patterns of inheritance?
Inheritance Patterns
- Autosomal Dominant Inheritance.
- Autosomal Recessive Inheritance.
- X-linked Inheritance.
- Complex Inheritance.
Q. What are the types of inheritance patterns?
The most common inheritance patterns are: autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, X-linked dominant, X-linked recessive, multifactorial and mitochondrial inheritance.
Q. Is height a Mendelian trait?
Traits that display a continuous distribution, such as height or skin color, are polygenic. The inheritance of polygenic traits does not show the phenotypic ratios characteristic of Mendelian inheritance, though each of the genes contributing to the trait is inherited as described by Gregor Mendel.
Q. Is height a dominant trait?
Yes and No. Humans come in a variety of heights — and genetics play a key role in determining whether you will be short or tall. There’s much more than just heredity to consider before assuming a person will automatically be the same height as their parents.
Q. Would a trait that has only two?
A trait with only 2 distinct phenotypes is most likely to be a single gene trait.