Dolores Piñero

Dolores Piñero
Dr. Dolores Piñero
Born 1890
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Died Unknown
Nationality Puerto Rican
Occupation Physician
Spouse Celestino Lopez
Children Dolores "Lolin" Lopez-Piñero

Dr. Dolores Piñero, (c.1890-19??) was one of the first four Puerto Rican women to earn a medical degree. She was also one of the first civilian doctors, and the first Puerto Rican female doctor to serve under contract in the U.S. Army during World War I. During World War I, Piñero helped establish a hospital in Puerto Rico to attend soldiers who had contracted the Swine Flu.

Contents

Early years

Piñero was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico at a time when the island was still a Spanish colony. There she received her primary and secondary education. Spain ceded Puerto Rico to the United States in accordance with the agreement reached in the 1898 Treaty of Paris, which officially ended the Spanish-American War. Piñero was sent to Boston, Massachusetts where she became fluent in English and continued her college education. In 1913, she earned her medical degree from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Boston.[1] Piñero was one of the first four women from Puerto Rico to earn a medical degree. The other three were María Elisa Rivera Díaz and Ana Janer in 1909, and Palmira Gatell in 1910.[2]

Return to Puerto Rico

After earning her degree, Piñero returned to Puerto Rico and set up her medical and anesthesia practice in what was then the town of Río Piedras (it is now a section of San Juan).[1]

In 1917, with the advent of World War I, the United States approved the Jones-Shafroth Act which conferred U.S. citizenship on Puerto Ricans. Puerto Ricans, with the exception of the women, were eligible for the draft. [1]

When the United States entered World War I, the U.S. Army Medical Corps believed that they had enough male physicians to cover their needs. Piñero applied for a position as a contract surgeon only to be turned down. After writing a letter to the Army Surgeon General in Washington, D.C. explaining her intentions, she received a telegram ordering her to report to Camp Las Casas at Santurce, Puerto Rico where she was assigned to the Medical Service Corps of the Army Medical Department.[1]

By 1918, the Army realized that there was a shortage of physicians specializing in anesthesia, a low-salary specialty required in the military operating rooms. Therefore, the Army reluctantly began hiring women physicians as civilian contract employees. On October 1918, she signed her contract with the Army. In this manner, and at her own insistence, Piñero contributed her professional skills to the war effort.[1]

Piñero was re-assigned to the Army General Hospital of Fort Brooke, located in the former Ballajá Barracks (in the grounds of the Fort San Felipe del Morro) in Old San Juan. There she worked as an anesthesiologist during the mornings, and in the laboratory during the afternoons. Piñero and four male colleagues received orders to open a 400-bed hospital in Ponce, Puerto Rico, to care for the patients who had been infected with influenza, known also as "the Swine Flu." Among the nurses who served in Ponce with Piñero was Rosa González, a noted registered nurse who authored "The Nurses Medical Dictionary".[3] The Swine Flu had swept through Army camps and training posts around the world, infecting one quarter of all soldiers and killing more than 55,000 American troops.[4] After the flu epidemic ended, Piñero was ordered back to the Army base hospital at San Juan.[1]

Post World War I

When her contract ended at the close of World War I, Piñero returned to her private practice in Río Piedras.[1] She married Celestino Lopez and had a daughter on March 17, 1922, named Dolores "Lolin" Piñero-Lopez.[5]

Little is known of Piñero's later years, with the exception that she was one of the leaders of the local Women's Civic Club and that she worked for the Puerto Rico Department of Health. Piñero was also the first Puerto Rican female to be named to the Puerto Rican Medical Examiners Board. [2]

See also


References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Women's Military Memorial
  2. ^ a b "LA MUJER EN LAS PROFESIONES DE SALUD (1898-1930); By: YAMILA AZIZE VARGAS1 and LUIS ALBERTO AVILES; PRHSJ Vol, 9 No. 1
  3. ^ Salud Promujer 1
  4. ^ Carol R. Byerly, Fever of War, (New York University Press, 2005), 6-10.
  5. ^ San Francisco Chronicle

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Puerto Rican women in the military — One of the least known roles played by Puerto Rican women has been that of revolutionists and soldiers. This is a brief account of some the Puerto Rican women who have participated in military actions either as members of a political… …   Wikipedia

  • Portal:Puerto Rico/Did you know-Puerto Rico? — Did you know Puerto Rico? …   Wikipedia

  • Military history of Puerto Rico — Military history of Puerto Rico …   Wikipedia

  • Histoire militaire de Porto Rico — Porto Rico L’histoire militaire attestée de Porto Rico englobe la période, qui va du XVIe siècle, quand les conquistadors espagnols combattirent les indigènes Taïnos, jusqu à aujourd hui avec l engagement des Porto ricains dans l armée… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Línea 182 (Buenos Aires) — 181 ← 182 → 184 Lugar Ubicación Área Metropolitana de Buenos Aires Descripción Tipo Autobús …   Wikipedia Español

  • Historia de la ciencia y la tecnología en España — Fragmento del Atlas catalán de Abraham Cresques, 1375. Historia de la ciencia y la tecnología en España es la denominación …   Wikipedia Español

  • Hermandad de Nuestro Padre Jesús Nazareno de La Algaba — Este artículo o sección necesita referencias que aparezcan en una publicación acreditada, como revistas especializadas, monografías, prensa diaria o páginas de Internet fidedignas. Puedes añadirlas así o avisar …   Wikipedia Español

  • Juan el Apóstol — «San Juan el Evangelista», por El Greco. 1600. Museo del Prado (Madrid). Apóstol y Evangelista …   Wikipedia Español

  • La Sonora Matancera — Datos generales Nacimiento 12 de enero de 1924 Origen …   Wikipedia Español

  • Rita Moreno — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Moreno. Rita Moreno En 2 …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”