History of Epidemiology Completely

In the previous article, the epidemiological definition was presented. At this time we will discuss the The History of Epidemiology completely.
Epidemiology is a science that has been known through historical records in ancient times and even developed together with medical science because these two disciplines are related to one another.
The following is the History of Epidemiology
Hippocrates (5th century BC)
He was named the father of modern medicine and put forward a theory about disease, namely that disease occurs due to contact with living bodies and is related to a person’s external and internal environment.
Veronese Fracastoro (1483-1553) and Thomas Sydenham (1624 –1689) gave birth to the theory that contact with living things causes infectious diseases
Edward Jenner (1749 – 1823)
Discovered methods of smallpox prevention through vaccination
Lous Pasteur (1822- 1895), Robert Koch (1843 – 1910), Ilya Mechniko (1845-1916)
There were discoveries in the fields of microbiology and parasitology, in which these scientists succeeded in proving microbes as the etiology of infectious diseases
Greunt (1939)
Developments in epidemiology in the aspect of quantitative analysis of morbidity and mortality
William Far (1839)
Develop a routine data collection system on the number and causes of death, as well as the application of vital statistical data to evaluate public health problems
John Snow (1849)
Continuing William Far’s analysis, John Snow postulates that cholera is transmitted by contaminated water
Framingham (1949)
Developing epidemiology systematically for the purposes of designing, conducting and analyzing epidemiological research, the results of well-known research on cardiovascular disease risk factors, have stimulated the development of multivariate analysis with logistic regression analysis, to determine the most dominant risk factors
Doll & Hill (1950 )
Contributing to epidemiological research and demonstrating the effectiveness and efficiency of case-control studies
Thus the discussion on the History Of Epidemiology completely. Hopefully useful