Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Occupation. Public health nurse. Known for. AIDS activism, co-writing the Denver Principles. Robert Boyle "Bobbi" Campbell Jr. (January 28, 1952 – August 15, 1984) [1] was a public health nurse and an early United States AIDS activist. In September 1981, Campbell became the 16th person in San Francisco to be diagnosed with Kaposi's ...

  2. Robert Boyle "Bobbi" Campbell Jr. (28 de janeiro de 1952 – 15 de agosto de 1984) foi um enfermeiro de saúde pública e um dos primeiros ativistas da AIDS nos Estados Unidos. [1] Em setembro de 1981, Campbell se tornou a 16ª pessoa em São Francisco a ser diagnosticada com sarcoma de Kaposi, [2] quando isso era um substituto para ...

  3. Bobbi Campbell was a nurse who put up a poster in his pharmacy window in 1981, warning people about \"gay cancer.\" He died of AIDS in 1984, but his poster is featured in an exhibition at the National Library of Medicine.

  4. On October 8, 1981, four months after the medical literature’s first description of a new syndrome of immune deficiency in young gay men, Marcus Conant, a dermatologist who would soon become a leader in responding to the new disease, diagnosed Bobbi Campbell with Kaposi’s sarcoma (KS). 15

    • Joe Wright
    • 2013
  5. 27 de ago. de 2021 · December 10: Bobbi Campbell, a San Francisco nurse, becomes the first KS patient to go public with his diagnosis. Calling himself the “KS Poster Boy,” Campbell publishes his first newspaper column, “Gay Cancer Journal,” for the San Francisco Sentinel. The column documents his experiences living with KS.

  6. Bobbi Campbell exhibits information at the Clinical Nursing Conference on AIDS at NIH, October 7, 1983. Photo sourced from Bobbi Campbell’s Diary, via UC San Francisco Library, Special Collections. “After Stonewall, there’s just this flourishing of gay groups all over the country,” says UW history professor Laurie Marhoefer, whose expertise includes queer and trans politics.

  7. 5 de mai. de 2022 · Learn about Bobbi Campbell, a gay nurse and activist who became one of the first people to publicly disclose his diagnosis of Kaposi's Sarcoma, the precursor of AIDS. He helped found PWA, created the first AIDS awareness poster, and co-authored The Denver Principles.