Virginia Apgar (1909–1974)Obstetrical anesthesiologist Virginia Apgar is best known as the inventor of the Apgar score, the first standardized method for evaluating a newborn's health to determine if any immediate medical intervention is required. The test, performed in the first few minutes of a baby's life, which measures pulse and respiration and examines skin color, has saved countless newborn lives. Apgar is also responsible for groundbreaking research into the effects of anesthesia during childbirth and advocacy on the prevention of birth defects.
Born and raised in Westfield, New Jersey, Apgar was determined to become a doctor at an early age, possibly inspired by the scientific experiments of her insurance executive father, who was also an amateur inventor and astronomer, or by her older brother's early death from tuberculosis or her other brother's chronic childhood illness. She attended Mount Holyoke College, where she graduated with a major in zoology in 1929. She was admitted to Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, one of the first women to be enrolled there. She graduated in 1933, and, determined to become a surgeon, she won a surgical internship at Columbia, but the chair of surgery discouraged her from continuing because other women he had trained in surgery failed to establish successful careers in surgery. Instead, Apgar was encouraged to concentrate on anesthesiology (at the time not generally recognized as a specialty and handled mostly by nurses). After completing her surgical residency, Apgar trained in the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Wisconsin, the first in the United States, before transferring to Bellevue Hospital in New York City...