Tobacco Surgeon General

Surgeon General History

Abstract

The National Library of Medicine originated as a few books in the office of the army's surgeon general, Joseph Lovell, between 1818 and 1836. It became the nation's largest medical library after the Civil War under the direction of John Shaw Billings and began publishing the Index-Catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon General's Office and preparing the Index Medicus. After Billings retired in 1895, the library marked time as army medical officers were rotated through as directors until modernization began under Harold Wellington Jones during World War II. during the directorship of Frank B. Rogers (1949-1963), who introduced MEDLARS, guided the move to a new building in Bethesda, and revitalized other operations, the institution received statutory authority as the National Library of Medicine within the Public Health Service (1956). By 1965, which was marked by the passage of the Medical Library Assistance Act, the library had again regained a position of world leadership.

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.
  • Blake JB. The physician as bibliographer. Bull N Y Acad Med. 1985 Apr;61(3):240–249.
  • Waserman MJ. Historical chronology and selected bibliography relating to the National Library of Medicine. Bull Med Libr Assoc. 1972 Oct;60(4):551–558.
VIDEO REVIEWS
Using the Surgeon General’s Family Health History Tool
Using the Surgeon General’s Family Health History Tool
Surgeon
Surgeon

FACTS ABOUT SMOKING
Share this Post

Related posts

Surgeon General report on smoking

Surgeon General report on smoking

DECEMBER 06, 2024

Order Documents Order 2014 Surgeon General s Report documents from our Publications Catalog. In the Publications Catalog…

Read More
Surgeon General Tobacco warning

Surgeon General Tobacco warning

DECEMBER 06, 2024

A Yale study estimates that 8 million lives have been saved in the United States as a result of anti-smoking measures that…

Read More