María Teresa Ferrari

Born: 11 October 1887, Argentina
Died: 30 October 1956
Country most active: Argentina
Also known as: María Teresa de Gaudino

Argentine educator, physician, and women’s rights activist María Teresa Ferrari was the first woman to become a university professor in Latin America. She also did groundbreaking research advancing women’s health, studying the effectiveness of radiation therapy instead of surgery for uterine tumors and creating a vaginoscope that revolutionized women’s health care in Brazil. She also started the Hospital Militar Central’s first maternity ward and gynecological services in 1925, which included Argentina’s first incubation services.
Ferrari completed her medical degree from the National University of Buenos Aires in 1911, but when she applied to teach at the university, she was offered a teaching position at the School of Midwifery instead. She fought for over a decade and was finally offered an alternate professorship in 1927, becoming a full professor in 1939. By that time, she had pursued advanced medical training in Europe and the United States and brought new innovations back to Argentina. She studied radiation therapy at the Curie Institute, learned to perform a Caesarean section and was the first woman to receive a diploma from the University of Paris’s medical faculty. She also founded the Argentina Federation of University Women in 1936 to fight for women’s rights. Despite her impressive career, Ferrari was forced into retirement in 1952 when she refused to support the Peronistas.

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