Tuberculosis
Found in 12 Collections and/or Records:
Box 178 (Research Studies), 1930-1949
''Contributions to the Study of Tuberculosis'' NJH Research Studies, Vols. 10-18, 1930-1949.
Box 212 (Press Book Releases), 1963-1965
Press Book Releases, 1963-1965
Box 221, 1899-circa 1950
Historical information, Correspondence, B'nai B'rith information.
Collins, Grabfelder, and Pisko Correspondence, 1911 July-September
Collins, Grabfelder, and Seraphine Pisko correspondence.
Dr. Otto Einstein, 1933-1991
Contains article by Tanja Britton about Dr. Otto Einstein who escaped from Nazi Germany in 1939. He and his wife joined their eldest son Dr. Robert Einstein in Denver and then moved to Colorado Springs. He was a pediatrician in Germany, but became a tuberculosis specialist, first at National Jewish Hospital and then at Cragmor Sanitorium. At Cragmor, he treated Navajo women from Arizona who had contracted tuberculosis. Dr. Otto Einstein was a third cousin of Albert Einstein.
Grabfelder and Pisko Correspondence, 1911 October-December
Correspondence related to Seraphine Pisko, Secretary of the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, and Samuel Grabfelder, President of the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives
Grabfelder and Pisko Correspondence, 1912 January-June
Correspondence related to Seraphine Pisko, Secretary of the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, and Samuel Grabfelder, President of the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives
Grabfelder and Pisko Correspondence, 1913 January-April
Correspondence related to Samuel Grabfelder, President of the National Jewish Hospital for Cosumptives, and Seraphine Pisko, Secretary of the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives
Grabfelder Correspondence, 1910 July-December
Samuel Grabfelder correspondence.
Grabfelder Correspondence, 1911 January-June
Correspondence related to Samuel Grabfelder, President of the National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives