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  1. Halsted did not have a private office in town, but would see his patients at the hospital or examine them in their homes. Out-of-town patients were examined pre and postoperatively in their hotel rooms.

    • J Scott Rankin
    • 10.1097/01.sla.0000201546.94163.00
    • 2006
    • Ann Surg. 2006 Mar; 243(3): 418-425.
  2. Following his discharge from Butler in 1886, Halsted moved to Baltimore, Maryland, to join his friend William Welch in organizing and launching the new Johns Hopkins Hospital. Halsted began working in Welch's experimental laboratory, and he presented a paper at Harvard Medical School.

  3. Halsted was first educated by a private tutor at home before being sent to boarding school at the age of 10 years . Despite briefly running away, he graduated from Andover School, MA, USA, in 1869 at 17 years of age.

    • Michael P Osborne
    • 2007
  4. May 21, 2018 · Halsted's father was the president of a textile-importing firm, Halsted, Haines and Co., and his mother came from the family of Richard Townley Haines, her husband's partner. When he was ten years old, Halsted's parents sent him to a private school.

  5. His private class went to his office 2 nights a week at 9 o’clock where they were quizzed until 11 or 12 o’clock. Lived with an intern Thomas McBride on East 25th Street (between Madison and 4th Ave).

  6. The list goes on: Halsted introduced local and regional anaesthesia, completed crucial work in vascular surgery, and composed a seminal tract on thyroid goitre. He was one of the four founding physicians of Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, USA.

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  8. Jan 30, 2014 · Halsted, who lived from 1852-1922, was one of the “Big Four” professors who founded John Hopkins Hospital. Halsted was an early pioneer for anesthesia and for aseptic technique in surgery, including the use of rubber gloves.

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