Women's Day Series: The woman behind the syringe patent | BananaIP
Letitia Geer | Women in STEM | St Mary's College
The History of Hypodermic Needles and Syringes
The story of syringes
10 of History's Greatest Women Inventors You Should Know | designnews.com
Smartlock Safety Syringe - the South African invention that changed medical treatment - the Awesome World of Things
A history of syringes and needles - Faculty of Medicine - University of Queensland
Happy International Women's Day! - Full Support HealthcareFull Support Healthcare
Flashback Friday - Syringe Evolution • University of Virginia School of Nursing
The Famous 5 Foundation - Letitia Mumford Geer transformed medicine with the 1899 patent for a one-handed syringe. Geer is one of many women whose early contributions to science, technology and medicine
The Use of the Hypodermic Syringe in the Civil War - National Museum of Civil War Medicine
File:Record-type hypodermic syringe, London, England Wellcome L0057737.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
MedSource Labs - Women's History Month, 2021
A history of syringes and needles - Faculty of Medicine - University of Queensland
Syringe - Wikipedia
Letitia Geer | Women in STEM | St Mary's College
The History of the Hypodermic Needle | Medshop — Medshop Australia
The history of the hypodermic needle | Live Better
Women Owned - Letitia Greer left a legacy of innovation as the nurse who invented the medical syringe.. Discover more historical women innovators: https://bit.ly/2PO9JKL This #WomensHistoryMonth, we're spotlighting women's role in innovation
The History of the Hypodermic Needle | Medshop — Medshop Australia
Ulrika Sultan on X: "Letitia Geer invented the one-hand operated syringe (1886/99). Her invention is the blueprint for medical syringes used worldwide and continues to inspire medical syringe inventions. #WomensHistoryMonth #MedTech #WomenInventor #
The story of syringes
The invention that made mass vaccinations possible - BBC News
The story of syringes
Choosing a Syringe: What Type of Syringes Are There and Which Should I — Muzamedical
Alexander Wood (1817-1884) | The University of Edinburgh