Skip to main content

SAGE Social Science Thesaurus

Search from vocabulary

Concept information

Preferred term

Robert Koch  

Definition

  • Robert Koch is considered one of the founders of modern bacteriology and a key contributor to the etiology of diseases, along with Louis Pasteur. He isolated several disease-causing bacteria, including those for anthrax (1877), tuberculosis (1882), and cholera (1883), and developed Koch's postulates criteria for ascertaining the microbial causes of a specific disease. [Source: Encyclopedia of Epidemiology; Koch, Robert]

Broader concept

Belongs to group

URI

http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-RZ5NPM4D-9

Download this concept: