List of physicians
This is a list of famous physicians in history.
Chronological lists
Ancient physicians
30th century BCE to 4th century CE
- List of ancient physicians
Post-classical physicians
5th century CE to 15th century CE
- List of post-classical physicians
Early modern physicians
16th century CE to the mid-18th century CE
- List of early modern physicians
Late modern physicians
mid-18th century CE to the mid-20th century CE
- List of late modern physicians
Physicians famous for their role in advancement of medicine
- William Osler Abbott (1902–1943) — co-developed the Miller-Abbott tube
- William Stewart Agras (born 1929) — feeding behavior
- Virginia Apgar (1909–1974) — anesthesiologist who devised the Apgar score used after childbirth
- Jean Astruc (1684–1766) — wrote one of the first treatises on syphilis
- Averroes (1126–1198) — Andalusian polymath
- Avicenna (980–1037) — Persian physician
- Gerbrand Bakker (1771–1828) — Dutch physician, with works in Dutch and Latin on midwifery, practical surgery, animal magnetism, worms, the human eye, comparative anatomy, and the anatomy of the brain
- Frederick Banting (1891–1941) — isolated insulin
- Christiaan Barnard (1922–2001) — performed first heart transplant
- Charles Best (1899–1978) — assisted in the discovery of insulin
- Norman Bethune (1890–1939) — developer of battlefield surgical techniques
- Theodor Billroth (1829–1894) — father of modern abdominal surgery
- Elizabeth Blackwell (1821–1910) — first woman to receive a medical degree in the United States; first openly identified woman to receive a medical degree; pioneered the advancement of women in medicine
- Alfred Blalock (1899–1964) — noted for his research on the medical condition of shock and the development of the Blalock-Taussig Shunt, surgical relief of the cyanosis from Tetralogy of Fallot, known commonly as the blue baby syndrome, with his assistant Vivien Thomas and pediatric cardiologist Helen Taussig
- James Carson (1772–1843)
- Charaka (c. 100 BCE – 200 CE) — Indian physician
- Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893) — pioneering neurologist
- Guy de Chauliac (1290–1368) — one of the first physicians to have an experimental approach towards medicine; also recorded the Black Death
- Anna Manning Comfort (1845-1931) — first woman medical graduate to practice in the state of Connecticut
- Loren Cordain (born 1950) — American nutritionist and exercise physiologist, Paleolithic diet
- Harvey Cushing (1869–1939) — American neurosurgeon; father of modern-day brain surgery
- Garcia de Orta (1501–1568) — revealed herbal medicines of India, described cholera
- Gerhard Domagk (1895–1964) — pathologist and bacteriologist; credited with the discovery of sulfonamidochrysoidine (KI-730), the first commercially available antibiotic; won 1939 the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Charles R. Drew (1904–1950) — blood transfusion pioneer
- Helen Flanders Dunbar (1902–1959) — important early figure in U.S. psychosomatic medicine
- Galen (129–c. 210) — Roman physician and anatomist
- Paul Ehrlich (1854–1915) — German scientist; won the 1908 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine; developed Ehrlich's reagent
- Christiaan Eijkman (1858–1930) — pathologist, studied beriberi
- Pierre Fauchard — father of dentistry
- René Gerónimo Favaloro (1923–2000) — Argentine cardiac surgeon who created the coronary bypass grafting procedure
- Alexander Fleming (1881–1955) — Scottish scientist, inventor of penicillin
- Girolamo Fracastoro (1478–1553) — wrote on syphilis, forerunner of germ theory
- Sigmund Freud (1856–1939) — founder of psychoanalysis
- Daniel Carleton Gajdusek (1923–2008) — studied Kuru, Nobel prize winner
- George E. Goodfellow (1855–1910) — recognized as first U.S. civilian trauma surgeon, expert in gunshot wound treatment
- Henry Gray (1827–1861) — English anatomist and surgeon, creator of Gray's Anatomy
- Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919) — physician and anatomist
- William Harvey (1578–1657) — English physician, described the circulatory system
- Henry Heimlich (1920–2016) — inventor of the Heimlich maneuver and the Vietnam War-era chest drain valve
- Orvan Hess (1906–2002) — fetal heart monitor and first successful use of penicillin
- Hippocrates (c. 460–370 BCE) — Greek father of medicine
- John Hunter (1728–1793) — father of modern surgery, famous for his study of anatomy
- Kurt Julius Isselbacher (1928–2019) — Former editor of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, prominent Gastroenterologist, founder of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Association of American Physicians Kober Medal winner
- Edward Jenner (1749–1823) — English physician popularized vaccination
- Elliott P. Joslin (1869–1962) — pioneer in the treatment of diabetes
- Carl Jung (1875–1961) — Swiss psychiatrist
- Leo Kanner (1894–1981) — Austrian-American psychiatrist known for work on autism
- Seymour Kety (1915–2000) — American neuroscientist
- Robert Koch (1843–1910) — formulated Koch's postulates
- Theodor Kocher (1841–1917) — thyroid surgery; first surgeon to win the Nobel Prize
- Rene Theophile Hyacinthe Laennec (1781–1826) — inventor of the stethoscope
- Janet Lane-Claypon (1877–1967) — pioneer of epidemiology
- Thomas Linacre (1460–1524) — founder of Royal College of Physicians
- Joseph Lister (1827–1912) — pioneer of antiseptic surgery
- Richard Lower (1631–1691) — studied the lungs and heart, and performed the first blood transfusion
- Paul Loye (1861–1890) — studied the nervous system and decapitation
- Wilhelm Frederick von Ludwig (1790–1865) — German physician known for his 1836 publication on the condition now known as Ludwig's angina
- Amato Lusitano (1511–1568) — discovered venous valves, studied blood circulation
- Madhav (8th century A.D.) — medical text author and systematizer
- Maimonides (1135–1204)
- Marcello Malpighi (1628–1694) — Italian anatomist, pioneer in histology
- Barry Marshall (born 1951)
- Charles Horace Mayo (1865–1939) — co-founder, Mayo Clinic
- William James Mayo (1861–1939) — co-founder, Mayo Clinic
- William Worrall Mayo (1819–1911) — co-founder, Mayo Clinic
- Salvador Mazza (1886–1946) — Argentine epidemiologist who helped in controlling American trypanosomiasis
- William McBride (1927-2018) — discovered teratogenicity of thalidomide
- Otto Fritz Meyerhof (1884–1951) — studied muscle metabolism; Nobel prize
- George Richards Minot (1885–1950) — Nobel prize for his study of anemia
- B. K. Misra - first neurosurgeon in the world to perform image-guided surgery for aneurysms, first in South Asia to perform stereotactic radiosurgery, first in India to perform awake craniotomy and laparoscopic spine surgery.[1]
- Frederic E. Mohs (1910–2002) — responsible for the method of surgery now called Mohs surgery
- Egas Moniz (1874–1955) — developed lobotomy and brain artery angiography
- Richard Morton (1637–1698) — identified tubercles in consumption (phthisis) of lungs; basis for modern name tuberculosis
- Herbert Needleman (1927–2017) — scientifically established link between lead poisoning and neurological damage; key figure in successful efforts to limit lead exposure
- Charles Jean Henri Nicolle (1866–1936) — microbiologist who won Nobel prize for work on typhus
- Ian Olver (born 1953)
- Gary Onik (born 1952) — inventor and pioneer of ultrasound guided cryosurgery for both the prostate and the liver
- William Osler (1849–1919) — "father of modern medicine"
- Ralph Paffenbarger (1922–2007) — conducted classic studies demonstrating conclusively that active people reduce their risk of heart disease and live longer
- George Papanicolaou (1883–1962) — Greek pioneer in cytopathology and early cancer detection; inventor of the Pap smear
- Paracelsus (1493–1541) — founder of toxicology
- Ambroise Paré (1510–1590) — advanced surgical wound treatment
- Wilder Penfield (1891–1976) — pioneer in neurology
- Marcus Raichle (born 1937) — father of functional neuroimaging
- Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852–1934) — father of modern neuroscience for his development of the neuron theory
- Joseph Ransohoff (1915–2001) — neurosurgeon who invented the modern technique for removing brain tumors
- Sir William Refshauge (1913–2009) — Australian public health administrator
- Rhazes (c. 865–925) (Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi)
- Juan Rosai (1940–2020) — advanced surgical pathology; discovered the desmoplastic small round cell tumor and Rosai–Dorfman disease
- Jonas Salk (1914–1995) — developed a vaccine for polio
- Lall Sawh (born 1951) — Trinidadian surgeon/urologist and pioneer of kidney transplantation in the Caribbean
- Martin Schurig (1656–1733) — first physician to occupy himself with the anatomy of the sexual organs.[2]
- Ignaz Semmelweis (1818–1865) — a pioneer of avoiding cross-infection — introduced hand washing and instrument cleaning
- Victor Skumin (born 1948) — first to describe a previously unknown disease, now called Skumin syndrome[3] (a disorder of the central nervous system of some patients after receiving a prosthetic heart valve)[4]
- John Snow (1813–1858) — anaesthetist and pioneer epidemiologist who studied cholera
- Thomas Starzl (1926–2017) — performed the first liver transplant
- Andrew Taylor Still (1828–1917) — father of osteopathic medicine
- Susruta (c. 500 BCE) — Indian physician and pioneering surgeon
- Thomas Sydenham (1642–1689) — clinician
- James Mourilyan Tanner (1920–2010) — developed Tanner stages and advanced auxology
- Helen B. Taussig (1898–1986) — founded field of pediatric cardiology, worked to prevent thalidomide marketing in the US
- Carlo Urbani (1956–2003) — discovered and died from SARS
- Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564) — Belgian anatomist, often referred to as the founder of modern human anatomy
- Vidus Vidius (1508–1569) — first professor of medicine at the College Royal and author of medical texts
- Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902) — German pathologist, founder of fields of comparative pathology and cellular pathology
- Carl Warburg (1805–1892) — German/British physician and clinical pharmacologist, inventor of Warburg's Tincture, a famed antipyretic and antimalarial medicine of the Victorian era
- Otto Heinrich Warburg (1883–1970) — German physiologist, medical doctor; Nobel prize 1931
- Allen Oldfather Whipple (1881–1963) — devised the Whipple procedure in 1935 for treatment of pancreatic cancer
- Priscilla White (1900–1989) — developed classification of diabetes mellitus and pregnancy to assess and reduce the risk of miscarriage, birth defect, stillbirth, and maternal death
- Carl Wood (1929–2011) — developed and commercialized in-vitro fertilization
- Alfred Worcester (1855–1951) — pioneer in geriatrics, palliative care, appendectomy, cesarean section, student health, nursing education
- Ole Wormius (1588–1654) — pioneer in embryology
- Sir Magdi Yacoub (born 1935) — one of the leading developers of the techniques of heart and heart-lung transplantation
- Boris Yegorov (1937–1994) — first physician in space (1964)
- Zhang Xichun (1860–1933) — first physician to integrate Chinese and Western medicine
Physicians famous chiefly as eponyms
Among the better known eponyms:
- Thomas Addison (1793–1860) – Addison's disease
- Alois Alzheimer (1864–1915) – Alzheimer's disease
- Hans Asperger (1906–1980) – Asperger syndrome
- John Brereton Barlow (1924–2008) – Barlow's syndrome
- Karl Adolph von Basedow – Basedow disease
- Hulusi Behçet – Behçet's disease
- Paul Broca – Broca's area
- David Bruce – Brucellosis
- Denis Parsons Burkitt – Burkitt lymphoma
- Albert Calmette (1863–1933) – Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), a vaccine for tuberculosis
- Carlos Chagas (1879–1934) – Chagas disease
- Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893) – Maladie de Charcot, Charcot joints, Charcot's triad, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease
- Jerome W. Conn (1907–1981) – Conn's Syndrome (primary hyperaldosteronism)
- Burrill Bernard Crohn (1884–1983) – Crohn's disease
- Harvey Cushing – Cushing's disease
- John Langdon Down – Down syndrome
- Bartolomeo Eustachi – Eustachian tube
- Gabriele Falloppio – Fallopian tube
- Camillo Golgi (1843–1926) – Golgi apparatus
- Ernst Gräfenberg – Gräfenberg spot (G-spot)
- Joseph-Ignace Guillotin (1738–1814) – guillotine
- Gerhard Armauer Hansen – Hansen's disease
- Thomas Hodgkin – Hodgkin's disease
- George Huntington – Huntington's disease
- Moritz Kaposi – Kaposi's sarcoma
- Wilhelm Frederick von Ludwig (1790–1865) – Ludwig's angina
- Charles Mantoux (1877–1947) – Mantoux test for tuberculosis
- Antoine Marfan (1858–1942) – Marfan syndrome
- Silas Weir Mitchell (1829–1914) – Mitchell's disease
- James Paget (1814–1899) – Paget's disease
- James Parkinson (1755–1824) – Parkinson's syndrome
- Juan Rosai (1940–2020) – Rosai–Dorfman disease
- Daniel Elmer Salmon – Salmonella
- Gunnar B. Stickler – Stickler syndrome
- Georges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la Tourette – Tourette syndrome
- Max Wilms (1867–1918) – Wilms' tumor
- Samuel Alexander Kinnier Wilson – Wilson's disease
Physicians famous as criminals
- John Bodkin Adams – British general practitioner; suspected serial killer, thought to have killed over 160 patients; acquitted of one murder in 1957 but convicted of prescription fraud, not keeping a dangerous drug register, obstructing a police search and lying on cremation forms
- Karl Brandt (1904–1948) – Nazi human experimentation
- Edme Castaing – murderer
- George Chapman – Polish poisoner and Jack the Ripper suspect
- Robert George Clements – murderer
- Nigel Cox – only British doctor to be convicted of attempted euthanasia
- Thomas Neill Cream – murderer
- Hawley Harvey Crippen – executed for his wife's murder
- Baruch Goldstein (1956–1994) – assassin
- Linda Hazzard – convicted of murdering one patient but suspected of 12 in total
- H.H. Holmes – American serial killer
- Shirō Ishii – headed Japan's Unit 731 during World War II which conducted human experimentation for weapons and medical research
- Mario Jascalevich - killed 9 hospital patients using curare
- Radovan Karadžić (born 1945) – convicted of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in Yugoslavia
- Jack Kevorkian (1923–2011) – convicted of second-degree murder, Michigan, April 13, 1999
- Jeffrey R. MacDonald – murdered a pregnant wife and two daughters in 1979
- Josef Mengele (1911–1979) – known as the Angel of Death; Nazi human experimentation
- Samuel Mudd (1833–1883) – condemned to prison for setting the leg of Abraham Lincoln's assassin
- Herman Webster Mudgett (1860–1896) – American serial killer
- Conrad Murray – convicted of involuntary manslaughter in death of pop star Michael Jackson
- Arnfinn Nesset – Norwegian serial killer
- William Palmer – British poisoner
- Marcel Petiot – French serial killer
- Herta Oberheuser (1911–1978) – Nazi human experimentation
- Richard J. Schmidt – American physician who contaminated his girlfriend with AIDS-tainted blood
- Harold Shipman (1946–2004) – British serial killer
- Michael Swango (born 1953) – American serial killer
- An A-Z list of Wikipedia articles of Nazi doctors
Physicians famous as writers
Among the better known writers:
- Mikhail Bulgakov (1891–1940) - Russian novelist and playwright
- Louis-Ferdinand Celine (1894–1961) - French novelist, author of Journey to the End of the Night
- Graham Chapman (1941–1989) - writer and actor, founding member of Monty Python
- Anton Chekhov (1860–1904) - Russian playwright
- Robin Cook - American author of bestselling novels, wrote Coma
- Michael Crichton (1942–2008) - American author of Jurassic Park
- A. J. Cronin (1896–1981) - Scottish novelist and essayist, author of The Citadel
- Anthony Daniels (born 1949) - as 'Theodore Dalrymple' and under his own name, a British author, critic and social and cultural commentator
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930) - British author of Sherlock Holmes fame
- Khaled Hosseini (born 1965) - American author, originally from Afghanistan, of bestselling novels The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns
- John Keats (1795–1821) - English poet
- Morio Kita - Japanese novelist and essayist; son of Mokichi Saitō
- Jean Baptiste Lefebvre de Villebrune (1732–1809) - French physician who translated several works from Latin, English, Spanish, Italian, and German into French
- Luke the Evangelist - one of the four Gospel writers of the Bible
- John S. Marr - proposed natural explanations for the ten plagues of Egypt
- W. Somerset Maugham (1874–1965) - British novelist and short story writer, wrote Of Human Bondage
- Alfred de Musset (1810–1857) - French playwright, discovered sign of syphilitic aortitis
- Taslima Nasrin
- Mori Ōgai - Japanese novelist, poet, and literary critic
- Walker Percy (1916–1990) - American philosopher and writer
- François Rabelais (1483–1553) - French author of Gargantua and Pantagruel
- Mokichi Saitō - Japanese poet
- Friedrich von Schiller (1759–1805), German writer, poet, essayist and dramatist
- William Carlos Williams (1883–1963) - American poet and essayist
And others:
- Patrick Abercromby (1656–c. 1716) - historian
- Chris Adrian
- Jacob Appel - short story writer
- John Arbuthnot
- Janet Asimov (1926-2019) (née Janet O. Jeppson) - American psychiatrist, wife of Isaac Asimov
- Arnie Baker - cycling coach
- Cora Belle Brewster (1859–?), writer, editor
- Sir Thomas Browne (1605–1682) - British writer
- Georg Büchner - German dramatist
- Ludwig Büchner - German philosopher
- Thomas Campion - poet, composer
- Ethan Canin - novelist, short story writer
- Deepak Chopra - Indian/American writer of self-help and health books
- Alex Comfort (1920–2000) - British writer and poet, author of The Joy of Sex
- Ctesias (5th century B.C.) - Greek historian
- Steven Clark Cunningham (born 1972), children's poem writer
- Erasmus Darwin (1731–1802) - British poet, grandfather of Charles Darwin
- Georges Duhamel (1884–1966) - French writer, dramatist, poet and humanist
- Havelock Ellis (1859–1940) - British writer and poet, author of The Psychology of Sex
- Viktor Frankl (1905–1997) - Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist, author of Man's Search for Meaning
- Samuel Garth (1661–1719) - British author and translator of classics
- Elmina M. Roys Gavitt (1828–1898) - American physician; medical journal founder, editor-in-chief
- Atul Gawande - surgeon and New Yorker medical writer
- William Gilbert - British author; father of W. S. Gilbert
- Oliver Goldsmith - British author
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (1809–1894) - American essayist
- Richard Hooker - author of M*A*S*H
- Arthur Johnston (1587–1641) - poet
- Charles Krauthammer (1950–2018) - American psychiatrist, syndicated political columnist
- R. D. Laing - Scottish writer and poet, leader of the anti-psychiatry movement
- Stanisław Lem (1929–2006) - Polish author of science-fiction (Solaris)
- Carlo Levi (1902–1975) - Italian novelist and writer
- David Livingstone (1813–1873) - Scottish medical missionary, explorer of Africa, travel writer
- Adeline Yen Mah - Chinese-American author
- Paolo Mantegazza (1831–1910) - Italian writer, author of science fiction book L'Anno 3000
- Jean-Paul Marat (1743–1793) - French writer, a leader of French Revolution; assassinated in bathtub
- Silas Weir Mitchell (1829–1914) - American writer
- Mungo Park - Scottish physician and explorer
- Hakim Syed Zillur Rahman - Indian author and translator of classical manuscripts
- José Rizal (1861–1896) - Filipino novelist, scientist, linguist, and national hero
- João Guimarães Rosa - Brazilian writer
- Sir Ronald Ross (1857–1932) - British writer and poet, discovered the malarial parasite
- Theodore Isaac Rubin (1923–2019) - American author of David and Lisa
- Oliver Sacks (1933–2015) - British essayist (The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat)
- Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965) - German charitative worker, Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1952), theologian, philosopher, organist, musicologist
- Frank Slaughter (1908–2001) - American bestseller author, wrote (Doctor's Wives)
- Tobias Smollett (1721–1771) - author
- Benjamin Spock (1903–1988) - American pediatrician, wrote Baby and Child Care
- Patrick Taylor - Canadian best-selling novelist
- Osamu Tezuka - Japanese cartoonist and animator; the "father of anime"
- Lewis Thomas (1913–1993) - American essayist and poet
- Sir Henry Thompson — British surgeon and polymath
- Vladislav Vančura (1891–1942) - Czech writer, screenwriter and film director
- Francis Brett Young (1884–1954) - English novelist and poet
Physicians famous as politicians
- Nazira Abdula, Mozambican Minister of Health
- Ayad Allawi - interim Prime Minister of Iraq
- Salvador Allende (1908–1973) - Chilean president
- Emilio Álvarez Montalván - Foreign Minister of Nicaragua
- Arnulfo Arias - Panamanian President
- Firdous Ashiq Awan - Pakistani politician
- Bashar Al-Assad - Syrian national leader
- Michelle Bachelet (born 1951) - Chilean president
- Hastings Kamuzu Banda (1898–1997) - Prime Minister, President and later dictator of Malawi
- Gro Harlem Brundtland (born 1939) - first Norwegian female prime minister; Director-General of the World Health Organization
- Margaret Chan - Director General of the WHO; former Director of Health of Hong Kong
- Chen Chi-mai - former mayor of Kaohsiung, Taiwan
- York Chow - Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food of Hong Kong
- Denzil Douglas - Prime Ministers of Saint Kitts and Nevis, 1995–2015
- François Duvalier (1907–1971) - also known as Papa Doc; President and later dictator of Haiti
- Antônio Palocci Filho - Brazilian politician, Finance Minister
- Christian Friedrich, Baron von Stockmar - Anglo-Belgian statesman
- Che Guevara - Latin American revolutionary leader
- George Habash - founder of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
- Ibrahim al-Jaafari - Prime minister of Iraq
- Radovan Karadžić (born 1945) - first President of Republika Srpska, now facing charges for genocide and crimes against humanity
- Mohammad-Reza Khatami - Iranian politician
- Ewa Kopacz - Polish Prime Minister who succeeded Donald Tusk, 2014–2015
- Juscelino Kubitscheck - Brazilian president
- Mahathir bin Mohamad - Malaysian prime minister
- Agostinho Neto (1922–1979) - MPLA leader and president of Angola
- Navin Ramgoolam - Prime minister of Mauritius
- Lloyd Richardson - President of the Parliament of Sint Maarten, 2014–2015
- José Rizal (1861–1896) - Filipino revolutionary and national hero
- Bidhan Chandra Roy - Indian politician
- Hélio de Oliveira Santos - Brazilian politician, mayor of Campinas
- Sun Yat-sen (1866–1925) - founder of the Republic of China
- Tabaré Vázquez - former Uruguayan President
- Ali Akbar Velayati (born 1945) - Iranian Foreign Minister, 1981–1997
- Ursula von der Leyen (born 1958) - German Federal Minister of Defence
- William Walker (1824–1860) - ruler of Nicaragua
- Ram Baran Yadav (born 1948) - first elected president of the republic of Nepal
- Yeoh Eng-kiong - former Secretary for Health and Welfare of Hong Kong
Argentina
- Luis Agote (1868–1954)
- Nicolas Bazan (born 1942)
- Hermes Binner
- Eduardo Braun-Menéndez (1903–1959)
- Ramón Carrillo (1906–1956)
- Bernardo Houssay (1887–1971)
- René Favaloro (1923–2000)
- Arturo Umberto Illia - 35th President of Argentina (1963–1966)
- Luis Federico Leloir (1906–1987)
- Julia Polak (1939–2014)
- Alberto Carlos Taquini (1905–1998)
Azerbaijan
- Karim bey Mehmandarov
Australia
- Bob Brown - parliamentary leader of the Australian Greens
- Andrew Laming - Australian politician
- Peter Macdonald
- Brendan Nelson - Australian politician
- Sir Earle Page - Prime Minister of Australia
- Dinesh Palipana - first quadriplegic medical graduate in Queensland, disability advocate
- Andrew Refshauge - Australian politician
- Mal Washer
- Michael Wooldridge
Canada
- Philippe Couillard- former Prime Minister of Quebec
- Thomas "Tommy" Douglas
- Carolyn Bennett
- Stanley K. Bernstein
- Frederick William Borden - Canadian MP and minister of the Militia
- Bernard-Augustin Conroy
- John Waterhouse Daniel
- Hedy Fry (born 1941) - Canadian politician, member of parliament
- Dennis Furlong
- Charles Godfrey
- Grant Hill - former Canadian MP
- Wilbert Keon - Canadian senator
- Keith Martin - Portuguese Canadian MP
- William McGuigan - mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia
- Théodore Robitaille - Lieutenant Governor of Quebec, Quebec MNA and Senator
- Bette Stephenson - Ontario MPP and former Minister of Labour, Minister of Education and Minister of Colleges and Universities
- Donald Matheson Sutherland - MP and former minister of National Defence
- David Swann
- Sir Charles Tupper (1821–1915) - Prime Minister of Canada (1896) and Premier of Nova Scotia (1864–1867); High Commissioner in Great Britain (1884–1887)
France
- Louis Auguste Blanqui - French revolutionary socialist
- Georges Clemenceau (1841–1929) - French statesman
- Jean-Paul Marat - French revolution leader
Italy
- Guido Baccelli (1830–1916) - seven times Minister of education
Japan
- Tomoko Abe - Representative of Japan
- Ichirō Kamoshita - Representative of Japan, former Environment Minister
- Taro Nakayama - former Representative of Japan, former Foreign Minister
- Chikara Sakaguchi - Representative of Japan, former Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare
- Koichiro Shimizu - former Representative of Japan, one of Koizumi Children
- Tsutomu Tomioka - former Representative of Japan, one of Koizumi Children
Pakistan
- Firdous Ashiq Awan[5]
- Asim Hussain
- Ghulam Hussain
The Netherlands
- Frederik van Eeden
- J. Slauerhoff
- Simon Vestdijk
- Leo Vroman
United Kingdom
- Liam Fox - British Secretary of State for Defence
- John Pope Hennessy - former Governor of Hong Kong
- David Owen - British politician
United States
- Stewart Barlow - member of the Utah House of Representatives
- Larry Bucshon (born 1962) - U.S. Congressman from Indiana
- Michael C. Burgess (born 1950) - U.S. Congressman from Texas
- Ben Carson (born September 18, 1951) - United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
- Tom Coburn (1948-2020) - U.S. Senator
- Howard Dean (born 1948) - former Governor of Vermont
- Scott Ecklund - member of the South Dakota House of Representatives
- Joe Ellington (born 1959) - member of the West Virginia House of Delegates
- Bill Frist (born 1952) - United States Senate Majority Leader
- Joe Heck (born 1961) - U.S. Congressman
- Steve Henry (born 1953) - Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky
- Jim McDermott - U.S. Congressman
- Larry McDonald - U.S. Congressman
- Ralph Northam (born 1959) - Governor of Virginia
- Christopher Ottiano (born 1969) - member of the Rhode Island Senate
- Rand Paul (born 1963) - U.S. Senator
- Ron Paul (born 1935) - U.S. Congressman
- Tom Price (American politician) (born October 8, 1954) - U.S. Congressman from Georgia and former Secretary of Health and Human Services
- David Watkins - member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
- Dave Weldon - U.S. Congressman and autism activist
- Ray Lyman Wilbur (1875–1949) - United States Secretary of the Interior, president of Stanford University
- Milton R. Wolf
- Thomas Wynne (1627–1691) - physician to William Penn, speaker of the first two Provincial Assemblies in Philadelphia (1687 & 1688)
Physicians famous as sportspeople
- Tenley Albright — Olympic figure skating champion
- Lisa Aukland — American professional bodybuilder and powerlifter
- Sir Roger Bannister (1929–2018) — first man to break the four-minute mile; English neurologist
- Tim Brabants — sprint kayaker, Olympic gold medalist
- Felipe Contepomi — Argentine rugby union footballer
- Ted Eisenberg — American 2018 world champion in long distance tomahawk throwing
- Gail Hopkins — American professional baseball player
- David Gerrard — New Zealand swimmer
- Randy Gregg — ice hockey player
- Jack Lovelock (1910–1949) — Olympic athlete
- Richard Mamiya (1925–2019) — football player
- Doc Medich, American baseball player
- Stephen Rerych — American swimmer, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder
- Dot Richardson — American softball player, Olympics; orthopedic physician
- Sócrates (Sócrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira) — Brazilian soccer player, played for the national team 1979–1986
Physicians famous for their role in television and the media
Australia
- Jeremy Cumpston
- Jonathan LaPaglia
- Peter Larkins
- Renee Lim
- Andrew Rochford
- Rob Sitch
Brazil
- Lúcia Petterle
Finland
- Emilia Vuorisalmi
Germany
- Marianne Koch
- Gunther Philipp
Ireland
- Ronan Tynan
Malta
- Gianluca Bezzina
Norway
- Anders Danielsen Lie
- Gro Harlem Brundtland (born 1939) - first Norwegian female prime minister; Director-General of the World Health Organization
South Africa
- Phil du Plessis
Spain
- El Gran Wyoming
Sweden
- Staffan Hallerstam
- Jesper Salén
- Rebecka Liljeberg
United Kingdom
- Carina Tyrrell
- Tony Gardner
- Harry Hill
- Christian Jessen
- Sunshine Martyn
- Pixie McKenna
- Sir Jonathan Wolfe Miller
- Darwin Shaw
- Hank Wangford
United States
- Jennifer Ashton
- Andrew Baldwin
- Jennifer Berman
- Deepak Chopra
- Lyn Christie
- Terry Dubrow
- Garth Fisher
- Leo Galland
- Anthony C. Griffin
- Sanjay Gupta
- Randal Haworth
- Jason Todd Ipson
- Matt Iseman
- Ken Jeong
- Sean Kenniff
- Will Kirby
- C. Everett Koop
- John S. Marr
- Lucky Meisenheimer
- Paul Nassif
- Andrew P. Ordon
- Mehmet Oz
- Nicholas Perricone
- Drew Pinsky
- Bernard Punsly
- Brent Ridge
- Nancy Snyderman
- Benjamin Spock
- Travis Stork
Physicians famous as beauty queens
- Mahmure Birsen Sakaoğlu, Miss Turkey 1936
- Eva Andersson-Dubin, Miss Sweden 1980
- Deidre Downs, Miss America 2005
- Anna Malova, Miss Russia 1998
- Lúcia Petterle, Miss World 1971
- Limor Schreibman-Sharir, Miss Israel 1973
Physicians famous as first ladies
- Susan Lynch (pediatrician), First Lady of New Hampshire
- Mildred Scheel, wife of Walter Scheel
Physicians famous for other activities
- Anderson Ruffin Abbott
- Jane Addams — social activist
- Dav and ultrasound technologies to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
- Oswald Avery (1877–1955) — molecular biologist who discovered DNA carried genetic information
- Ali Bacher — cricketer
- Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi — traveller
- Roger Bannister — runner, first sub-four-minute miler
- Josiah Bartlett — American statesman and chief justice of New Hampshire
- T. Romeyn Beck (1791–1855) — American forensic medicine pioneer
- Ramon Betances — surgeon, PR nationalist
- Maximilian Bircher-Benner (1867–1939) — nutritionist
- Oscar Biscet — human rights advocate
- Herman Boerhaave — humanist
- Alexander Borodin — composer, chemist
- Thomas Bowdler — censor
- Lafayette Bunnell — explorer of Yosemite Valley
- John Caius (1510–1573) — physician and educator
- Roberto Canessa — survivor of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571, which crashed in the Andes Mountains in 1972
- Gerolamo Cardano — mathematician
- Alexis Carrell — transplant surgeon, eugenicist, Vichy sympathizer
- Ben Carson — African-American neurosurgeon
- Anton Chekhov — Writer
- Laurel B. Clark (1961–2003) — American astronaut, killed in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster
- Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) — mathematician and astronomer
- Merv Cross
- Ted Eisenberg — Guinness World Record holder for most breast augmentation surgeries performed.
- Steven Eisenberg — known as "The Singing Cancer Doctor."
- Sextus Empiricus (2nd–3rd century C.E.) — philosopher
- Ken Evoy
- Giovanni Fontana — Venetian physician, engineer, and encyclopedist
- Luigi Galvani — physicist
- Pierre Gassendi (1592–1655) — philosopher
- William Gilbert (1544–1603) — physicist
- Carl Goresky — physician and scientist
- W. G. Grace — cricketer
- John Franklin Gray (1804–1881) — American educator, first practitioner of homeopathy in the US
- Nehemiah Grew — botanist
- Samuel Hahnemann — founder of homeopathy
- Armand Hammer — entrepreneur
- Daniel Harris
- Karin M. Hehenberger — diabetes expert
- Hermann von Helmholtz — physicist
- Jan Baptist van Helmont (1577–1655) — physiologist
- Harry Hill — British comedian
- Courtney Howard, Yellowknife-based ER physician and one-time leadership candidate, Green Party of Canada
- Samuel Gridley Howe — abolitionist
- Ebenezer Kingsbury Hunt (1810–1889) — President of the Connecticut State Medical Society; director of the Retreat for the Insane
- Varsha Jain - UK Space doctor/researcher for women's health
- Mae Jemison (born 1956) — astronaut
- David Johnson — American swimmer
- Stuart Kauffman (born 1939) — biologist
- John Keats — poet and author
- John Harvey Kellogg — cereal manufacturer
- Charles Krauthammer (1950–2018) — columnist and political commentator
- Cesare Lombroso (1835–1909) — based his system of criminology on physiognomy
- John McAndrew (1927–2013) — All-Ireland Gaelic Footballer
- June McCarroll — inventor of lane markings
- Pat McGeer — Canadian basketball player
- James McHenry (1753–1816) — signer of the United States Constitution
- Archibald Menzies — naturalist
- Franz Mesmer (1734–1815) — proponent of mesmerism and the idea of animal magnetism
- Jonathan Miller (1934–2019) — television presenter and stage director
- Paul Möhring (1710–1792) — zoologist, botanist
- Maria Montessori — educator
- Boris V. Morukov — cosmonaut
- Lee "Final Table" Nelson — professional poker player
- Haing S. Ngor — Oscar-winning film actor
- Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers (1758–1840) — astronomer
- Dinesh Palipana — physician with disability and advocate
- Roza Papo — army general
- James Parkinson — physician, geologist, political activist
- Claude Perrault — architect
- Christian Hendrik Persoon — South African botanist
- Pope John XXI — pope
- Scott Powell — co-founder of the nostalgia group Sha Na Na
- Weston A. Price — traveler, educator
- Syed Ziaur Rahman — physician and medical scientist
- John Ray — plant taxonomer
- Prathap C. Reddy
- Bradbury Robinson — threw the first legal forward pass in American football history while a medical student at St. Louis University
- Peter Mark Roget — English lexicographer
- Jacques Rogge — sports official
- Mowaffak al-Rubaie — human rights advocate, member of the Interim Iraqi Governing Council
- Benjamin Rush — signer of the United States Constitution
- Daniel Rutherford (1749–1819) — chemist
- Bendapudi Venkata Satyanarayana
- Félix Savart — physicist
- Albert Schweitzer — humanist
- Michael Servetus (1511–1553) — burnt at the stake by Calvinists for heresy
- Paul Sinha — British comedian
- Rob Sitch — Australian comedian
- Sócrates (1954–2011, Sócrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira) — Brazilian football (soccer) player
- James Hudson Taylor (1832–1905) — British missionary to China and founder of the China Inland Mission
- Norman Earl Thagard — astronaut
- Debi Thomas (born 1967) — Olympic figure skater
- William E. Thornton — astronaut
- John Tidwell — American basketball player
- Nasiruddin al-Tusi — astronomer
- Andrew Wakefield — conducted studies on disputed link between vaccines and neurodevelopmental disorders, which had many serious consequences
- William Walker — Latin American adventurer
- Moshe Wallach (1866–1957) — founder and director of Shaare Zedek Hospital, Jerusalem, for 45 years
- John Clarence Webster — Canadian historian
- Wilhelm Weinberg — with G. H. Hardy, developed the Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium model of population genetics
- JPR Williams — rugby union player
- Hugh Williamson — American patriot, statesman, Surgeon General of SC
- Thomas Young — scientist
See also
- List of fictional physicians
- List of psychiatrists
- List of neurologists and neurosurgeons
- List of presidents of the Royal College of Physicians
- List of Iraqi physicians
- List of Russian physicians and psychologists
- List of Slovenian physicians
- List of Turkish physicians
References
- http://www.neurosocietyindia.org/site/Past-president/Basant%20Kumar%20Misra,%20President%20NSI%202008.pdf
- Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Archived 2007-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
- "Andrea Ruzza. Nonpsychotic mental disorder after open heart surgery. Asian Cardiovascular and Thoracic Annals October 16, 2013". Archived from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
- "Ukrainian doctors which changed the world". Ukraine-in.ua. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
- "Firdous Ashiq Awan: professional doctor to seasoned parliamentarian". The Express Tribune. 2017-06-01. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
- "Top 5 Pakistani Celebrities who are doctors". Style.Pk. 2015-07-05. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
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