Background
STUDNITSIN, Aleksandr was born in 1901.
Dermatologist and venerologist
STUDNITSIN, Aleksandr was born in 1901.
1924 graduated 2nd Moscow Medicine Institute.
1924-1925 served as doctor in Red Army. 1925-1926 probationer, Moscow Venerological Institute. 1926-1929 doctor in venerological unit in Bezhetsk and Rzhev Uezds, Kalinin Oblast.
1930-1938 doctor and venerologist, various Moscow hospitals. 1936-1941 intern, Korolenko Hospital and associate, Syphilology Department, Central Skin and Venerological Institute. 1941-1943 associate, Sverdlov Skin and Venerological Institute.
Assistant, Chair of Military Medicine, Sverdlov Medicine Institute. 1943-1950 Assistant, Chair of Skin Diseases, Moscow Medicine Institute, Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic Ministry of Health. 1950-1953 senior associate, Central Skin and Venerological Institute.
1953-1958 lecturer, then Professor, Chair of Skin and Venereal Diseases, 2nd Moscow Pirogov Medicine Institute. 1943-1955 simultaneously Head, Cadres Department, Board of Evacuation Hospitals. Later Head,Department of Research Institute, Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic Ministry of Health.
Since 1958 Chairman, Learned Commission on Dermatology and Venerology, Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic Ministry of Health, and Deputy Chairman, same commission, USSR Ministry of Health. Member, Problems Commission on Dermatology and Venerology, USSR Academy of Medical Science. Member, Higher Certifying Commission, USSR Minister of Higher Education.
Deputy Chairman, All-Union Society of Dermatologists and Venerologists. Board member, All-Russ, and Moscow Society of Dermatologists and Venerologists. Member, Editor Council, State Medicine Publishing House.
1952 attended International Congress of Dermatologists and Venerologists, London. 1960 attended International Symposium, Prague.
Religion is bad because it forces people to rely on outside authority, rather than becoming self-reliant.
Every person has rights to express his or her opinion, but the opinion could be expressed if it was in accordance with the general interests of Soviet society.