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  1. He entered the University of Edinburgh aged 21, where he was elected President of the Royal Medical Society, returning after completing his studies and gaining his medical degree in 1818, immediately to Worcester Infirmary again. He declined a lectureship at Edinburgh in order to do so.

  2. In 1810 Hastings began an apprenticeship as an apothecary in Stourport-upon-Severn and after qualifying his employers persuaded him to apply for the job as apothecary at Worcester General Infirmary under the new title of House Surgeon.

  3. Apr 6, 2018 · One of the most significant figures who was shared across the museums was Charles Hastings, founder of the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association, which later became known as the British Medical Association (BMA).

  4. Nevertheless, cise of his profession, were spent three years of Mr. Hastings' though his attendance at lectures and at the Medical Society life; and he had only to regret that on three or four occasions was often interrupted, he pursued his academical course, and during this period his health gave way, and rendered it neces- felt an increasing ...

  5. Dec 10, 2008 · He was born in Ludlow - one of 15 children - went to school at Worcester Royal Grammar school, and, after qualifying as a doctor, started work at the Worcester Royal Infirmary.

  6. rham, and the operation of the first passenger railways. Medical practice was still not fully recognised as a profession and doctors tended to join together in numerous groups, some centred on the colleges in London, Edinburgh, or Glasgow and others j.

  7. Dec 13, 2007 · Educated at Victoria Coll Medical School in Toronto with postgraduate training in Great Britain, Hastings was one of the first full-time obstetricians to practise in Toronto. As Toronto's MOH 1910-29, he purified the water supply and established an internationally recognized public-health nursing system.

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