they were given the 1945 nobel prize for physiology/medicine (joint)
Howard Florry ( 1898 - 1968 ) and Ernst Boris Chain ( 1906 - 1979 ) furthered Alexander Flemming's work in creating antibiotics.
Ernst B. Chain and Sir Howard Florey were part of the team that successfully purified penicillin and demonstrated its effectiveness as an antibiotic in the 1940s. Their work revolutionized medical treatment and laid the foundation for the widespread use of antibiotics in fighting bacterial infections.
Florey and Chain discovered the therapeutic potential of penicillin, the first widely used antibiotic. Their research led to the development of penicillin as a medical treatment for bacterial infections, saving millions of lives. Their work laid the foundation for the field of antibiotic therapy.
Howard Florey worked in Adelaide, Oxford, Cambridge and America.
The antibiotic properties of penicillin were first recognized by A. Flemming in 1928. Commercial production of penicillin came from the pioneer work of E. Chain and H.W. Florey in 1938. Penicillin was made available to allied troops in the latter part of World War II.See related link Below...It was discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928.pencillwas invented in 1928
It was accidentally discovered in 1928 that penicilliumwould produce penicillin in certain conditions. But it was 1945, after years of work by Florey and Chain, before sufficient stock for mass use could be produced.
Howard Florey was an Australian pharmacologist who played a key role in the development of penicillin as an antibiotic. Along with Alexander Fleming and Ernst Chain, he conducted research that led to the mass production and widespread use of penicillin, saving countless lives during World War II and beyond. Florey's work laid the foundation for the modern era of antibiotics and revolutionized the treatment of bacterial infections.
Howard Florey and his mum
help people with medical
It was accidentally discovered in 1928 that penicilliumwould produce penicillin in certain conditions. But it was 1945, after years of work by Florey and Chain, before sufficient stock for mass use could be produced.
Fleming*
Sir Howard Walter Florey worked at the University of Oxford in England. He was a pharmacologist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945 for his role in the development of penicillin.