The Plasma Pioneer: Charles Drew's Second Life in Medical History
The Innovation Chronicles: A Revolutionary Black Inventors Nonfiction Series
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Narrado por:
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Elizabeth Gorman
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De:
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David G. Stone
He saved millions of lives, then history nearly erased him.
In 1940, as London burned under Nazi bombardment, Dr. Charles Drew was quietly revolutionizing medicine in a Columbia University laboratory. His breakthrough research on blood plasma preservation would soon save thousands of Allied soldiers—but his greatest battle wasn't fought on any battlefield.
The Plasma Pioneer reveals the remarkable true story of Charles Richard Drew, the African American physician whose scientific genius collided with the brutal realities of segregated America. When the U.S. military demanded that blood donations be segregated by race—despite Drew's own research proving the practice scientifically baseless—he made a decision that would define his legacy: he resigned from the program he created rather than compromise his principles.
What listeners will discover:
- How Drew's blood banking techniques saved countless lives during WWII
- The shocking discrimination he faced despite his life-saving innovations
- His tragic death at 45 and the myths that surrounded it
- How the civil rights movement rediscovered his forgotten contributions
- The ongoing impact of his work in modern medicine
From his early struggles in segregated Washington, D.C., to his groundbreaking research at McGill and Columbia, from his principled stand against military segregation to his dedication to training Black physicians at Howard University, Drew's story illuminates both the promise and prejudice of American medicine.
This isn't just a biography—it's the story of how brilliance perseveres, how principles matter more than recognition, and how one man's courage continues to save lives generations later.
Perfect for listeners of Hidden Figures, medical history enthusiasts, and anyone interested in untold stories of American heroes.
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