276:, on January 29, 1875. He graduated from Tulane University School of Medicine in 1899 and initially practiced medicine in rural Mississippi. He developed a particular interest in Tropical Medicine after attending a 1903 meeting of the American Medical Association, held in New Orleans on the subject of hookworm. During the meeting, the consensus of opinion was that hookworm was new to the United States. From his experience practicing medicine in rural Mississippi, Bass knew this claim to be wrong. Shortly thereafter, Bass purchased a microscope for diagnostic purposes and conducted a study of children in his rural Mississippi medical practice. Within eight months, Bass determined that approximately 75 to 80 children in that locale suffered from hookworm.
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224:(Endameba buccalis) in the microbiological flora of the mouth, beginning his interest in oral health. However, it was only upon his 1940 retirement from university administrative posts that he began intensive research on dental health, a period in which he made extensive use of his experience in parasitology and microbiology. Bass focused on the understanding and prevention of the principle diseases of the mouth, particularly
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Bronze doors commemorating
Charles C. Bass were dedicated in Tulane University's Rudolph Matas Library in 1981. Among Bass's awards was a gold medal by the National Institute of Social Sciences for his contributions to the welfare of humankind. He was the 1967 recipient of an award from the Society
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On his return from his studies at Johns
Hopkins University, Bass established a medical practice in New Orleans which included a self-financed research laboratory. He quickly gained the attention of investigators at Tulane University School of Medicine and so joined the faculty of Tulane University
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Bass was dean of the Tulane
University School of Medicine from 1922 to 1940, a period of rapid expansion of the medical school and its facilities. This included the 1930 construction of new Hutchinson Clinics of medicine. His tenure included a tumultuous interaction with the administration of then
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who made significant contributions to understanding malaria, hookworm, and other diseases. Later Bass studied the relationship between dental health and general well-being. Bass articulated and promoted the "Bass
Technique of Toothbrushing" and developed improved means of flossing teeth, for which
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and periodontoclasia. Bass carried out extensive investigation and experimentation to determine the best means of using toothbrushes and dental floss for effective prevention of the important diseases of the mouth. Bass widely promoted means of improved oral hygiene, purposefully avoiding his own
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To further his investigations into hookworm and other aspects of parasitology, Bass enrolled in a one year course of study at the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine. During his studies there in 1904, he worked with Dr. Charles E. Simon and with Dr. William S. Thayer to develop his
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204:, and discovered the cause and means of transmission of the poultry disease Ulcerative Enteritis. Much of Bass's early work in tropical medicine was conducted in collaboration with fellow Tulane University researcher Foster Johns.
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School of
Medicine in 1905, initially as an unpaid investigator. In 1907, Bass became a salaried instructor at the medical school. rising through the academic ranks to eventually become dean.
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169:, a breakthrough in finding cures for the disease. He applied this method during a 1912 series of investigations into the cause of malaria during the
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https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10002-60322391/charles-bass-in-us-social-security-death-index-ssdi?tr_id=m_odhpae6hz9_gssysjbqso
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some refer to Bass as "The Father of
Preventive Dentistry". He subsequently became a university administrator, serving as dean of the
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Bass traveled to
England in 1908 to further his investigational skills in the field of immunology through work with
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341:"The Optimum Characteristics of Dental Floss for Personal Oral Hygiene", Dent. Items. Int. 70:921, 1948.
338:"The Optimum Characteristics of Toothbrushes for Personal Oral Hygiene", Dent. Items. Int. 70:697, 1948.
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547:"Charles Bass: Country Doctor, Pioneering Parasitologist, and the Father of Preventative Dentistry"
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253:. Bass eventually prevailed and established a teaching service at this large inner-city hospital.
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200:, being the first to recognize this disease in Louisiana. He simplified methods of diagnosing
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586:, Rudolph Matas Library, Tulane University, special collection, accessed February 16, 2012.
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International
Congress of Hygiene and Demography, Washington, DC, September 23–28, 1912.
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Medical
Archives of the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, accessed February 19, 2012.
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The Tulane University Medical Center: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Medical Education
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476:, Charles C. Bass, The Bulletin of the Tulane University Medical Faculty, 22(2) 1963.
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138:(January 29, 1875 – August 25 1975) was an American medical doctor and researcher on
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and Cora Bass. Mary Elizabeth Bass also had a career in academic medicine, in
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Beginning in 1914, Bass commenced his investigations on the understanding of
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Around the same time, he succeeded in isolating the ova of the uncinaria, or
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New Orleans' Charity Hospital: A Story of Physicians, Politics, and Poverty
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Plaque Control, Dental Hygiene, and the Pioneering Work of Charles C. Bass
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in Lesions of Periodontoclasia", Proc. Soc. Exp. Bio. I Med. 66:9, 1947.
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Bass served as president of the Southern Medical Association in 1926.
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344:"Personal Oral Hygiene for Children", Arch. Pediatrics 72:295, 1955.
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Dental flossing of a patient by a dental health professional
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Special Collections of the Tulane University Library System
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to provide safe and hygienic conditions in the project.
362:"Aug 31, 1975, page 166 - Daily News at Newspapers.com"
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474:"Collected Papers Relative to Dental Health"
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644:Tulane University School of Medicine alumni
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520:, Louisiana State University Press, 1992,
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208:Contributions to dentistry and oral health
173:project, a part of the efforts of Colonel
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151:Contributions to tropical medicine
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322:for Preservation of Oral Health.
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412:"The History of Dental Hygiene"
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260:Personal life and early career
251:Charity Hospital (New Orleans)
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609:Photograph of Charles C. Bass
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634:American tropical physicians
155:In 1911, Bass discovered an
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90:The Bass Method of Brushing
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280:investigational skills.
161:method of culturing the
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54:Carley, Mississippi, US
317:Awards and recognition
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122:Preventative dentistry
71:New Orleans, Louisiana
604:Personal Oral Hygiene
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147:, from 1922 to 1940.
572:Dr. Charles E. Simon
222:Entamoeba gingivalis
136:Charles Cassidy Bass
119:Nutritional diseases
516:John E. Salvaggio,
307:Mary Elizabeth Bass
245:Louisiana Governor
82:Physician-scientist
289:Dr. Almroth Wright
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333:Endameba buccalis
184:Hookworm organism
175:William C. Gorgas
140:tropical medicine
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102:Institutions
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659:1975 deaths
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557:27 November
270:Mississippi
628:Categories
422:2012-02-18
349:References
163:plasmodium
79:Occupation
47:1875-01-29
311:pathology
295:in 1916.
240:Academia
198:pellagra
194:beriberi
190:hookworm
158:in vitro
110:Research
551:aai.org
167:malaria
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226:caries
202:typhus
272:, in
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522:ISBN
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