Royal Mail celebrates British medical and scientific breakthroughs

Good news for science-loving fans of philately: Royal Mail have released a set of stamps to celebrate British medical breakthroughs throughout the ages.

The launch marks some of the most important medical discoveries that have taken place in the UK since the late 19th Century and include the pioneering work of Sir Ronald Ross in 1897 which was pivotal in the development of today's anti-malarial drugs. Other stamps recognise heart-regulating beta-blockers, the antibiotic properties of penicillin and the computed tomography (CT) scanner.

You can get your hands on the set at your local Post Office or via the Royal Mail website.

Click on the images below to gigantify them.

i-671d7b598f5cb08bb4bd23ecda3cb874-Medical Breakthrough 58p Penicilin-thumb-130x124-55865.jpg i-03af5e338adebed973c421dc42ab7a08-Medical Breakthrough 67p Lens Implant-thumb-130x124-55868.jpg i-dc204382248d62d8dc96efea3ceba4ee-Medical Breakthroughs 1st Beta blockers-thumb-130x124-55871.jpg

i-d5443863eef49857a71945222c496748-Medical Breakthroughs 60p Hip replacement-thumb-130x123-55874.jpg i-b46b47eac27af018c29f97c00a5c0504-Medical Breakthroughs 88p Malaria-thumb-130x124-55877.jpg i-17bfcf9fc277dbda56bd4e01a9a66c62-Medical Breakthroughs 97p Tomography scanner-thumb-130x124-55880.jpg

Previously: Royal Mail celebrates 350 years of the Royal Society

More like this

Have you ever taken one of the now-over-the-counter heartburn relief remedies like Tagamet, Zantac, or Pepcid? How about the beta-blocker atenolol (Tenormin) or metoprolol (Lopressor) for antihypertensive therapy, or the original less-selective beta-blocker propranolol (Inderal) for migraines,…
Leave it to PharmGirl, MD, to point me in the direction of a story that addresses the core theme of this blog: not only can medicines come from the Earth, but the Earth can itself be medicine. This time we're not talking about South Carolina "sandlappers" as detailed in my inaugural post here as…
For some reason, Eurekalert has a more than the average number of interesting press releases today. Take these with a grain of salt -- press releases are usually nonsense -- but still very interesting. People who wear glasses are not more introverted: Myopia or shortsightedness is a complex eye…
[From the archives; originally published November 18, 2005] Malaria is one of the world's leading infectious killers. World-wide, almost 40% of the world's population is at risk of acquiring this disease--many of them in poor countries with limited resources to control the disease. Each year,…