|
When she completed her research in 1875, she returned to Brooklyn to a private follow and also labored at Woman's Hospital of Brooklyn. After graduating in 1862, she moved to Brooklyn and opened a personal medical apply specializing in obstetric and gynecological surgical procedure. However, she chose Pennsylvania and returned to Brooklyn to enhance her profession strategies differing from her female peers. Dixon remained settled within a medical subculture that was predominantly feminine. Jones' experience with patients with medical associated points to gynecology had laid her foundation along with her sturdy curiosity in her area of work that had led her to be one of the leading surgeons in treatment of the feminine reproductive system. Jones' expertise in networking with male had allowed her to work beside of very properly-identified surgeons at the time resembling W. Gill Wylie, C. C. Lee, Henry Clark Coe, Arthur M. Jacobus, and Robert Tuttle Morris. |
|