Background
FEDOTOV, Nikolay was born in 1901.
Hygienist and medical historian
FEDOTOV, Nikolay was born in 1901.
1930 graduate Medical Faculty, Tomsk University.
1912-1919 lathe operator at Ural factories. 1919-1920 served in Red Army. 1930-1939 postgraduate student and assistant professor, 1939-1951 associate professor and head, Chair of Social Hygiene, Tomsk Medical Institute.
1944-1949 head, Tomsk Oblast Sanitary Inspectorate. 1951-1966 head, Chair of Social Hygiene, Health Service Organization(s) and Medical History, Tomsk Medical Institute. Also dean Sanitation and Hygiene Faculty, Tomsk Medical Institute.
From 1959 bd chairman, Tomsk Section, All-Union Social of Medical History. From 1960 member, Problems Commission Nr 46, Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Academy of Medical Sciences. Member. Experts’ Commission, Higher Certifying Commission, Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Ministry of Higher and Secondary Special Education.
Member, ed council, journal Sovetskoye zdravookhraneniye. Company-ed, history of medical section, ”Biosystems Engineering ” (Large Soviet Encyclopedia) (2nd ed). Chairman, philosophy seminar at Tomsk Medical Institute.
Organized conferences on medical history for physicians in Urals and Siberia. Supervised compilation of study Zdorov’ye naseleniya v Tomskoy oblasti (The Health of the Population in Tomsk Oblast). Foreign two years rector, Tomsk Medical Institute.
Frequently elected to Party Bureau, Tomsk Medical Institute. Attended plenary sessions of Tomsk City Communist Party of the Soviet Union Coml. Chairman, Okrug Election Committee.
Wrote over 70 works on soc hygiene and medical hist in Siberia;, Pubi: Zdravookhraneniye za 30 let v Tomskoy Oblasti (Thirty Years of the Health Service in Tomsk Oblast) (1947). Doctor’s thesis Ocherki po istorii meditsiny Sibiri v svayazi s istoriyey yeyo kolonizatsii, 1585-1861 (The History of Medicine in Siberia in Relation to the History of Siberian Colonization, 1585-1861) (1948). Coauthor, 'Zdravookhraneniye v Tomskoy oblasti (The Health Service in Tomsk Oblast) (1957).
Religion is bad because it forces people to rely on outside authority, rather than becoming self-reliant.
Every Soviet citizen has rights to express his or her opinion, but it should be in accordance with the general interests of the society.
Communist Party member from 1920.