Canadian Medical Hall of Fame

The Canadian Medical Hall of Fame
AbbreviationCMHF
Formation1994
Legal statusactive
Purposeadvocate and public voice, educator and network
HeadquartersLondon, Ontario, Canada
Region served
London, Ontario, Canada
Official language
English, French
WebsiteOfficial site

The Canadian Medical Hall of Fame is a Canadian charitable organization, founded in 1994, that honours Canadians who have contributed to the understanding of disease and improving the health of people. It has an exhibit hall in London, Ontario, an annual induction ceremony, career exploration programs for youth and a virtual hall of fame.

Laureates

2023
  • Stephen Blizzard
  • Elaine A. Carty
  • Carol P. Herbert
  • Jean-Lucien Rouleau
  • Nahum Sonenberg
  • Samuel Weiss

2022

  • John Bell
  • Thomas A. Dignan
  • Daniel J. Drucker
  • David J. A. Jenkins
  • Jonathan L. Meakins
  • Noralou P. Roos

2020

  • Harvey Max Chochinov
  • Jean Gray
  • Jeanne Mance
  • Marco Marra
  • Joseph B. Martin
  • Annette O'Connor

2019

  • G. Brock Chisholm
  • Naranjan Dhalla
  • James Dosman
  • Jacalyn Duffin
  • Connie Eaves
  • Rémi Quirion

2018

  • Philip B. Berger
  • Brett Finlay
  • Vladimir Hachinski
  • Balfour Mount
  • Cheryl Rockman-Greenberg
  • Emily Stowe

2017

  • Michel G. Bergeron
  • Michel Chrétien
  • Richard Goldbloom
  • Emmett Matthew Hall
  • Michael R. Hayden
  • F. Estelle R. Simons

2016

  • Michael Bliss
  • May Cohen
  • Gordon Guyatt
  • David Naylor
  • Sir Charles Tupper
  • Mark Wainberg[1]

2015

  • Alan Bernstein
  • Judith G. Hall
  • Bernard Langer
  • John McCrae
  • Julio Montaner
  • Duncan G. Sinclair

2014

  • Max Cynader
  • Adolfo J. de Bold
  • Walter Mackenzie
  • Thomas John Murray
  • Ronald Worton
  • Salim Yusuf

2013

  • Antoine Hakim
  • David MacLennan
  • Arnold Naimark
  • Claude Roy
  • Ian Rusted
  • Bette Stephenson

2012

  • John Dirks
  • Terry Fox
  • Armand Frappier
  • F. Clarke Fraser
  • Peter Macklem
  • John Macleod
  • Lap-Chee Tsui

2011

  • Albert Aguayo
  • John Bienenstock
  • Paul David
  • Jonathan Campbell Meakins
  • Allan Ronald
  • D. Lorne Tyrrell[2]

2010

  • Alan C. Burton
  • William A. Cochrane
  • Phil Gold
  • James C. Hogg
  • Vera Peters
  • Calvin Stiller

2009

  • Sylvia Fedoruk
  • Tak Wah Mak
  • Ronald Melzack
  • Charles Tator
  • Mladen Vranic

2007

  • Elizabeth Bagshaw
  • Felix d'Herelle
  • Jean Dussault
  • Wilbert Keon
  • Endel Tulving

2006

  • David Hubel
  • John McEachern
  • Ian McWhinney
  • Anthony Pawson
  • Hans Selye

2004

  • Oswald Avery
  • John G. FitzGerald
  • Marc Lalonde
  • Maurice LeClair
  • Ernest McCulloch
  • James Till

2003

  • William Feindel
  • Donald Olding Hebb
  • Charles Hollenberg
  • Charles B. Huggins
  • Fraser Mustard
  • Marie-Marguerite d'Youville

2001

  • John E. Bradley
  • Henry Friesen
  • William Gallie
  • Peter Lougheed
  • Frederick Montizambert
  • Charles Scriver
  • Lucille Teasdale-Corti

2000

  • Bernard Belleau
  • G. Malcolm Brown
  • John Robert Evans
  • Jack Hirsh
  • Lenora King
  • David Sackett

1998

  • Murray Barr
  • Norman Bethune
  • Roberta Bondar
  • Tommy Douglas
  • Ray Farquharson
  • Charles Miller Fisher
  • Claude Fortier
  • Gustave Gingras
  • Harold E. Johns
  • Heinz Lehmann
  • Maud Menten

1997

  • Charles Thomas Beer
  • Wilfred Gordon Bigelow
  • Henri J. Breault
  • Wilfred Thomason Grenfell
  • Pierre Masson
  • Brenda Milner
  • Robert Laing Noble
  • Louis Siminovitch

1995

  • Henry J. M. Barnett
  • Bruce Chown
  • Herbert Jasper
  • Charles Philippe Leblond
  • William Thorton Mustard
  • Robert B. Salter
  • Michael Smith

1994

  • Maude Abbott
  • Frederick Banting
  • Charles Best
  • John Browne
  • James Collip
  • Douglas Harold Copp
  • Charles George Drake
  • Jacques Genest
  • William Osler
  • Wilder Penfield

References

  1. "Announcing our 2016 Inductees". Canadian Medical Hall of Fame. October 8, 2015. Archived from the original on June 22, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  2. "Canadian Medical Hall of Fame honours 6". CBC.ca. 2011-04-29. Retrieved 2011-04-30.

42°59′06″N 81°14′44″W / 42.98513°N 81.24555°W / 42.98513; -81.24555

This article is issued from Wmcloud. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.