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| - Anna Magdalena Stecksén (Estocolmo, 27 de mayo de 1870- Södertälje, 15 de octubre de 1904) fue una científica, médica y patóloga sueca. Fue la primera mujer doctora en Medicina en Suecia. (es)
- Anna Magdalena Stecksén, née le 27 mai 1870 à Stockholm et décédée le 15 octobre 1904 à Södertälje, était une scientifique et pathologiste suédoise. (fr)
- Anna Magdalena Stecksén (Stockholm, 27 mei 1870 — Södertälje, 15 oktober 1904) was een Zweeds arts en tevens de eerste vrouwelijke doctor in de geneeskunde in Zweden. (nl)
- Анна Стексен (швед. Anna Magdalena Stecksén, 27 мая 1870 — 15 октября 1904) — шведский врач, первая шведка, защитившая докторскую диссертацию по медицине. (ru)
- Anna Magdalena Stecksén, född 27 maj 1870 i Adolf Fredriks församling i Stockholm, död 15 oktober 1904 i Södertälje, var en svensk läkare och patolog. Hon var också Sveriges första kvinnliga medicine doktor. (sv)
- Anna Magdalena Stecksén (May 27, 1870 – October 15, 1904) was a Swedish scientist, physician and pathologist. She was the first female Doctor of Medicine in Sweden. Born in Stockholm, Anna Stecksén was the daughter of general major , who encouraged her to pursue advanced education. She was awarded a Bachelor of Arts at Uppsala University in 1890, and became a student at Karolinska institutet the same year. She pursued her studies at Tübingen and Paris 1898–99. At a time when most women who studied medicine specialized in gynecology, she specialized in pathology (en)
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has abstract
| - Anna Magdalena Stecksén (May 27, 1870 – October 15, 1904) was a Swedish scientist, physician and pathologist. She was the first female Doctor of Medicine in Sweden. Born in Stockholm, Anna Stecksén was the daughter of general major , who encouraged her to pursue advanced education. She was awarded a Bachelor of Arts at Uppsala University in 1890, and became a student at Karolinska institutet the same year. She pursued her studies at Tübingen and Paris 1898–99. At a time when most women who studied medicine specialized in gynecology, she specialized in pathology She became the first Swedish woman to defend a thesis in medicine. She was awarded the Doctor of Medicine in 1900. Her thesis, Studie öfver Curtis blastomyocel - från svulst - etiologisk synpunk investigated whether there was any truth in the then-popular theory that cancer was caused by Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Her research was not conclusive, but interesting enough for her to raise the funds to continue her research. She was only the second women to publish in the Swedish medical journal Hygiea. However, she contracted an infection caused by her work in her laboratory in 1902 which eventually led to her death in 1904, in Södertälje. She was buried at Norra cemetery in Solna. (en)
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