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Marsden Scott Blois Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS C 583

Abstract

Notes, reports, articles and speeches document Dr. Blois' work with biophysics, melanoma and melanin research, and the development of medical informatics.

Dates

  • Creation: 1947-1989

Extent

10 Linear Feet (12 boxes)

Creator

Physical Location

Materials stored onsite. History of Medicine Division. National Library of Medicine

Language of Materials

Collection materials primarily in English

Access Restrictions

No restrictions on access.

Copyright and Re-use Information

Donor's copyrights were transferred to the public domain. Archival collections often contain mixed copyrights; while NLM is the owner of the physical items, permission to examine collection materials is not an authorization to publish. These materials are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. It is the user's responsibility to research and understand any applicable copyright and re-publication rights not allowed by fair... use. NLM does not grant permissions to publish.

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Privacy Information

Archives and manuscript collections may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations. Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals represented in any collection without the consent of those individuals may have legal ramifications for which the National Library of Medicine assumes no responsibility....

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Biographical Note

Dr. Blois' scientific career began as a biophysicist at Stanford University's Hansen Laboratories of Applied Physics. Born in 1919, Marsden Scott Blois graduated from the U.S. Naval academy in 1941. He left his position as Director of Naval Research in the late 1940s to pursue a Ph.D. in biophysics at Stanford. In addition to his post doctoral work at the Hansen Laboratories, Blois served as director of Stanford's biophysics graduate program. By the... late 1950s his research on electron spin resonance of biopolymers led to an interest in melanin. To better enable his dermatological inquiries, Blois earned at medical degree at Stanford in the early 1960s and continued his research there. While continuing his affiliations with Stanford, Blois helped establish the Melanoma Clinic and Melanoma Foundation at the University of California, San Francisco in the late 1960s. His determination to better facilitate treatment and medical research led to his exploration of medical informatics. From the early 1970s until his death in 1988, Dr. Blois was a leader in the development of medical informatics, serving as editor to MedComp, writing and speaking on theories of medical description, and chairing the incipient Department of Medical Information Sciences at UCSF.

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Collection Summary

Notes and reports generated from work at Stanford University and the University of California, San Francisco make up the largest portion of the collection, devoted to biophysics, melanoma and melanin research, and the development of medical informatics (1952-1989); the same subjects are covered in a collection of articles and speeches written by Blois (1951-1987). The collection also contains scant correspondence (1953-1988), notes from physics course... work taken at Stanford University (1947-1951), and programs and notes from various scientific and medical conferences (1955-1987).

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