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Born Oct. 6, 1783 in St. Laurent d'Oingt (near Lyon). Died Aug. 14, 1843 at Bourbonne-les-Bains (near Langres, in Champagne-Ardennes).
Source: Notes to a collection of his letters. Previously at https://collegeofphysicians.org/FIND_AID/hist/histnc2.htm
Nicholas Chervin, French physician and yellow fever researcher, was born on 6 October 1783 at St. Laurent d'Oingt. He died at Bourbonne les Bains on 14 August 1843.
Chervin received his M.D. from the University of Paris in 1812. He then studied typhus in a military hospital in Mainz and became Surgeon at the Hotel Dieu in Lyon. In 1814, Chervin travelled to Guadaloupe to study yellow fever. In pursuit of his research, he sojourned in the United States from 1818 to 1822, then went to Spain in 1823, and Cadiz and Gibraltar in 1828.
Chervin was an ardent believer in the non contagiousness of yellow fever. He wrote several monographs on the subject and campaigned for the elimination of quarantine on the basis of his research. From 1820 to 1822, Chervin wrote to physicians in most of the port cities of the East Coast of the United States, from Portland, Maine, to New Orleans, Louisiana, gathering information regarding the experiences of each physician with yellow fever and his opinion regarding the contagious or non contagious aspects of the disease. The single largest group of responses came from physicians in Philadelphia. The majority of Chervin's respondents did not believe in the contagiousness of yellow fever.
See also the Finding Aid to a cllection of Nicolas Chervin papers 1816-1836 at the National Library of Medicine, NIH. If the link fails to work, just search the site for Chervin.
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2004