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2006
June: Elsevier and Diabetes India (DI) launch Diabetes
Research & Metabolic Syndrome in June 2006 focusing on diabetes issues in
South Asia, China, Africa and the Middle East where 60 - 70% of the world
population and diabetes patients reside—regions underrepresented in the
mainstream diabetes journals.
February: Elsevier launches High Energy Density Physics publishing new results
on the physics of matter and radiation under extreme conditions such as when
stars explode or hot nuclear fusion processes occur. This field has expanded
rapidly in recent years due to the ability of laboratories to reproduce
extreme conditions.
2005
Elsevier partners with the American Academy of
Nanomedicine to launch the first peer-reviewed journal devoted to
nanomedicine-the emerging science of using molecular machines to treat human
disease. Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology, and Medicine provides a new
focal point for efforts to advance this revolutionary technology for
maintaining and restoring human health.
2004
New research in Archives of Oral Biology by
Finnish scientists demonstrated that smoking depletes calcium stores in the
bones, and a simple salivary test can prove it.
2002
Sydney Brenner and Robert Horvitz won the 2002 Nobel
Prize in Medicine for their work on genetic regulation of organ development
and programmed cell death. Horvitz’s first and seminal paper identifying two
cell-death genes was published in Cell in 1986. Brenner, Editor of the
Academic Press flagship title, Journal of Molecular Biology in the
1980s, recently edited Encyclopedia of Genetics, published under the
Academic Press imprint.
2000
Eric Kandel won the Nobel Prize in 2000 for his work on
mechanisms of learning and memory in Aplysia much of which was published in Cell
and Neuron.
1997
Dr. Stanley Prusiner won the 1997 Nobel Prize for his
work on prions and self-replicating proteins as a mechanism of disease
transmission. His early work was published by Cell in the face of much
controversy. Dr. Prusiner is also co-editor of The Molecular and Genetic
Basis of Neurological Disease, published under the imprint of
Butterworth-Heinemann.
1996
The first reported disclosure on Viagra™ and its utility
for the treatment of male erectile dysfunction was published in Bioorganic
& Medicinal Chemistry Letters, Vol. 6, pp.1819-1824 (1996).
1993
Published in 10 volumes in 1993, The Encyclopedia of
Language and Linguistics was hailed as the most comprehensive and
ambitious work of its kind ever produced.
1981
Mosby nursing author Donna Wong, Ph.D., RN, PNP, CPN,
FAAN, developed the FACES Pain Rating Scale, which is used throughout the
world to assess the pain of children.
1972
The article “Expectations and the Neutrality of Money” in
the Journal of Economic Theory, Vol. 4, no. 2, (1972) earned the
author, Robert E. Lucas, a Nobel Prize.
1969
Egan’s Fundamentals of Respiratory Care has
been credited with initiating the educational growth of the respiratory care
profession. First published in 1969 under the title Fundamentals of
Inhalation Therapy by Donald F. Egan, the book endures as the most widely
used and respected resource in respiratory care.
1946
In 1946 Butterworth published a book, edited by Sir
Alexander Fleming, about a revolutionary new antibiotic, Penicillin: Its
Practical Application.
1940
The Lancet published the first article on the
revolutionary antibiotic effects of penicillin in mice.
1939
Peter Drucker’s book Management: Tasks,
Responsibilities, Practices was included in the list of 100 books that
shaped the twentieth century. Peter Drucker has published with Heinemann, now
Elsevier since 1939, an unprecedented 66-year relationship.
1937
“The Sources of Atmospheric Pollution” in Fuel
in Science and Practice, Vol. 15, pp. 221-228 (1937) by R. Lessing
provided early insight into the continuing debate about the impact of the
combustion of fossil fuels on the environment.
1923
The publication of Le Corbusier’s Towards a New
Architecture, Architectural Press, in 1923 was a major contribution to the
development of modern architectural thinking.
1858
The publication of Gray’s Anatomy in 1858 was
a landmark for the study of the human anatomy and in many ways for the whole
of medicine.
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