Shortly after the outbreak of World War II, geneticist R. A. Fisher and serologist George Taylor published an appeal to workers in the newly founded Emergency Blood Transfusion Service (EBTS). Taylor led the Galton Serum Unit, a Cambridge laboratory producing blood grouping reagents for a national network of hospitals and EBTS depots. Fisher was Taylor's former boss at University College London (UCL), who had recently relocated to the agricultural Rothamsted Experimental Station in Harpenden. The letter, entitled `Blood Groups of Great Britain', entreated blood depot medical officers to send to Fisher or Taylor the records of transfusion volunteers. They explained that the records, which included the results of blood grouping tests, constituted valuable `genetical and ethnological data' that could: not only … throw light on points that require very large numbers for their elucidation, but will open up the field, at present wholly unexplored, of the homogeneity or heterogeneity in respect to blood groups of the population of these islands. In response, the researchers were inundated with lists of donor records and blood grouping results. It represented the start of two wartime research programmes that Fisher and his colleagues conceived during these years. The first -- to study the distribution of ABO blood group allele frequencies across Britain -- made use of the many thousands of blood grouping records generated by the EBTS. [extract]
...MoreBook Gausemeier, Bernd; Müller-Wille, Staffan; Ramsden, Edmund (2013) Human Heredity in the Twentieth Century.
Article
Klugman, Matthew;
(2013)
“We'll Be Accused of Bleeding Them from Both Ends”: Paying for the Gift of Blood
Book
Jenny Bangham;
(2020)
Blood Relations: Transfusion and the Making of Human Genetics
Article
Giulio Rizzoni;
(2016)
La donazione di sangue nella città di Oxaca de Juárez (Messico). Un percorso di analisi a partire dall'antropologia medica
Thesis
Whitfield, N;
(cited 2011)
A Genealogy of the Gift: Blood Donation in London, 1921--1946
Article
Schneider, William H.;
(2003)
Blood Transfusion between the Wars
Article
Alan R. Rushton;
(2020)
“Whatever Works”: Innovations in the Treatment of Hemophilia in the United States 1783–1950
Book
Linda Palfreeman;
(2016)
Spain Bleeds: The Development of Battlefield Blood Transfusion During the Civil War
Article
Thaddeus Sunseri;
(2016)
Blood Trials: Transfusions, Injections, and Experiments in Africa, 1890–1920: Table 1
Article
Antonio Reguera Teba;
Ana Isabel Parras Garrido;
(2023)
Blood transfusion during the Spanish civil war
Book
Boel Berner;
(2020)
Strange Blood: The Rise and Fall of Lamb Blood Transfusion in 19th Century Medicine and Beyond
Article
Wayne Soon;
(2016)
Blood, Soy Milk, and Vitality: The Wartime Origins of Blood Banking in China, 1943–45
Book
Brush, Stephen G.;
(2009)
Choosing Selection: The Revival of Natural Selection in Anglo-American Evolutionary Biology, 1930--1970
Article
Pascal Germann;
(2015)
Mobilisierung des Blutes. Blutspendedienst, Blutgruppenforschung und totale Landesverteidigung in der Schweiz, 1940–1960
Article
Bangham, Jenny;
(2014)
Writing, Printing, Speaking: Rhesus Blood-Group Genetics and Nomenclatures in the Mid-Twentieth Century
Article
Tabery, James;
(2008)
R. A. Fisher, Lancelot Hogben, and the Origin(s) of Genotype--Environment Interaction
Article
Plutynski, Anya;
(2006)
What Was Fisher's Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection and What Was It For?
Book
Rushton, Alan R.;
(2009)
Genetics in Medicine in Great Britain 1600 to 1939
Chapter
Pelis, Kim;
(2007)
“A Band of Lunatics down Camberwell Way”: Percy Lane Oliver and Voluntary Blood Donation in Interwar Britain
Article
Maria Sergeeva;
Evgeniya Panova;
(2020)
The studies of blood transfusion and the attempts of its implementation into medical practice in 1800–1875: the fate of J.-A. Roussel’s device in Russia
Book
Rose George;
(2018)
Nine Pints: A Journey Through the Money, Medicine, and Mysteries of Blood
Be the first to comment!