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  1. In fact, the first description of the “Chicago Classification” was in a publication authored by Fox and Bredenoord in 2007 (CCv0.5) setting the stage for the inaugural meeting of the International HRM Working Group in San Diego in 2008 that eventually led to CCv1.0 in 2009.

    • Rena Yadlapati, John E. Pandolfino, Mark R. Fox, Albert J. Bredenoord, Peter J. Kahrilas
    • 10.1111/nmo.14053
    • 2021
    • 2021/01
  2. Mar 2, 2021 · This classification system was adopted by the ISI at its Chicago meeting in 1893, marking the ILCD’s inception. It was adopted by the American Public Health Association in 1898 for use in the United States of America (US), Canada and Mexico, with the proviso that it should be revised every 10 years (Elkin, Citation 2012 ).

    • Musaed Ali Alharbi, Godfrey Isouard, Barry Tolchard
    • 2021
  3. Along with HRM came the need for a new classification system, coined the Chicago Classification in recognition of the important work led by Drs Peter Kahrilas and John Pandolfino at Northwestern University. This system has been refined over time based on the results of worldwide clinical studies.

  4. Farr and d'Espine to prepare a uniform classification at the first International Statistical Congress in 1853. The report of this committee was presented by Bertillon at the meeting of the International Statistical Institute in Chicago in 1893 and adopted by it. The classification prepared by Bertillon's committee was based on the

  5. Blooms Taxonomy is a classification system used to define and distinguish different levels of human cognition—i.e., thinking, learning, and understanding.

  6. Jan 1, 2018 · In 1893, the first International List of Causes of Death (called the Bertillon Classification) was introduced at the International Statistical Institute in Chicago. The American Public Health Association recommended that Canada, Mexico, and the USA adopt the classification system in 1898.

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  8. In the 18th century, Carl Linnaeus published a system for classifying living things, which has been developed into the modern classification system. Despite existing for hundreds of years, the science of classification — taxonomy — is far from dead.

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