Virginia Apgar's test has saved millions of babies; Google Doodle says thank you.
The extraordinary life of pioneering doctor Virginia Apgar is being celebrated today on what would have been her 109th birthday.Dr Virginia Apgar was an American obstetrical anesthetist and a leader in her field. She most famous for decreasing the infant mortality rate when she invented a quick way to assess the health of a newborn immediately after birth, called the Apgar Score.
To this day, the Apgar Score is standard practice in hospitals worldwide, including Australia. Here we look back on the life of a woman, who against the odds, had an incredible impact on the medical industry and the life of every newborn baby.
Because she was a woman, Dr Apgar endured many near-misses and discouragement in her career.
Born in 1909, the youngest of three children, Virginia Apgar was raised in Westfield New Jersey. Her family was a musical family that "never sat down". Her father was an insurance executive, but also an amateur inventor and astronomer.
Apgar's older brother died early from tuberculosis, and her other brother suffered a chronic illness through childhood. Her family's heath battles, along with a restless sense of curiosity, inspired Apgar to study zoology and then obtain her medical degree.
Apgar began her career in an era when women struggled to enter medicine. She was discouraged by an esteemed medical professor and chair of surgery, Dr Allen Whipple, to follow a career as a surgeon because he had seen many women attempt to be successful surgeons and ultimately fail.
Following Dr Whipple's advice she continued study in anesthesiology. She eventually became the director of Columbia University's department of anaesthesia, and in 1949 she became the first woman to become a full-time professor at Columbia University.
In the 1950s, the US infant mortality rate decreased, but the number of infant deaths within the first 24 hours remained high. The figures disturbed Apgar, who in her work observed infants who were blue or were struggling to breathe were listed as stillborn and left to die. The scientist began investigating methods for decreasing the infant mortality.
Her research led to what is known as the Apgar score, which is, even today, a very widely used technique of assessing a newborn's health.
Thanks in part to Apgar's work, the death rate for newborns in the US has dropped from one in 30 in the 1950s to one in 500 today.







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