Gustave Etoc-Demazy
Gustave Etoc-Demazy (30 July 1806 - 12 November 1893) was a French doctor.
Life
Born in Le Mans, he was the son of François Etoc-Demazy, a pharmacist. On 28 December 1830, he was appointed as an intern in the Paris hospitals and hospices following a competitive examination, graduating at the top of his class. He was a doctor at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital during the 1832 cholera epidemic and then at the temporary hospital in the Grenier de Réserve (also in Paris), specifically for cholera patients.
He graduated as a physician on 3 September 1833 and on 14 August the following year was made chief physician at Le Mans' asylum, a post he held until 1872. He then became honorary chief physician by a ministerial decree dated 2 September 1875. He was also made president of the oversight commission for the asylum.
In the meantime, on 19 August 1834, a ministerial decree confirmed him as epidemic doctor for Le Mans. He was dismissed from that post in 1856 and made an honorary physician by a ministerial decree on 25 March the same year. On 18 August 1849, he was made a member of the council for public hygiene and health for Sarthe and from 23 August 1856 vice-president of that council. From 1 March 1855 to 16 December 1860, he was made a member and then president of the cantonal consultative committee for Sarthe.
Sources
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