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Mioara Mincu

Mioara Mincu, born Slaniceanu at Conțești, Dâmbovița county, Romania (10 February 1933 - 2 February 2008) was a physician and MD in Social Medicine and Public Health, teacher and publicist. She was a leader of the feminist movement in Romania and in 1992 she established the Romanian Women's National Confederation (Confederația Naționale a Femeilor din România - CNFR) holding the position of executive President until 2008. Dr Mioara Mincu was a member of the Demographic Center of WHO, UNICEF and UNESCO bureau, and a member of the Romanian Writer and Publicist Physicians' Society (Societatea Medicilor Scriitori si Publicisti din Romania - SMSPR).

Contents

1 Biography 2 Activity 3 Published work 4 Honors 5 Criticism 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External links

Biography

Mioara Mincu was born on 10 February 1933 in Conțesti village, Dâmbovița county, Romania, from parents Elena (Duta) and Ion Slaniceanu. She received her primary education at the village school which will later bear her name. After high-school graduation she enrolled in Mihai Eminescu Literature Faculty at Bucharest University, but after one year she switched to medical school. In 1958 she graduated from Carol Davila Medical and Farmacy Institute (presently Carol Davila Medical and Farmacy University of Bucharest).

She married Dr. Mircea Radulescu and later on Dr. Petre Mincu. She had two sons: George Mihail Radulescu si Alexandru Ioan Mincu.

Activity

- University instructor at the Public Health Department of the Medical and Farmacy University and manager at Stela Clinic

- Later on, manager at Batistei Polyclinic, and manager at Ion Cantacuzico Hospital in Bucharest (1981-1989)

- Chief Medical Doctor at Sector 2 Bucharest (1979-1983)

- Physician and MD in Social Medicine and Public Health following dissertation: "Health Education for Youth" (thesis supervisor Prof.Dr. V. Coroi, UMF, 1977)

- She promoted the health education in newspapers: Magazin (Magazine), Știință și Trehnică (Science and Technology), Femeia (Woman), Sănătatea (Health), Luceafărul (Evening Star), and at Radio Romania broadcast station

- She led the feminist movement in Romania. In 1992 she established the Romanian Women's National Confederation and she held the President position until 2008

- In 1990 she established the Nursing College Carol Davila in Bucharest, a 3-year study school to educate nurses in the following qualifications: general medical practice, pharmacy, balneo-physio-kinetotherapy and health recovery

- At Mioara Mincu's suggestion and the proposal of Carol Davila Nursing School, the Romanian Academy elected General Dr. Carol Davila as post-mortem member in 2003, 175 years from his birth

- Member of the Demographic Centre of WHO, UNESCO and UNICEF bureau. Member of the Romanian Writer and Publicist Physicians' Society (Societatea Medicilor Scriitori si Publicisti din Romania - SMSPR).

- In 1996 she began the construction of a Culture and Health Centre in Contesti, her native village.

- Starting October 1993 she organized the annual festival called Rural Woman Day (Ziua Țărăncii).

Published work

Books - Albu Roxana Maria; Bistriceanu Valeriu; Mincu Mioara: "Human Anatomy and Physiology", Universul Publisher

- Constantinescu Mircea; Mincu Mioara: "Surgery".

- "Tests collection for entrance examination"- coordinator; "Medical Terms Dictionary", co-author: Letitia Morariu; "Internal Medicine, Connecting Specialties and Palliative Therapies", "Neurology and Psychiatry", co-authors: Dr. Gh. Vuzitas, Dr. A. Anghelescu; "What the Young People Need to Know"- coordinator.

- German Course for Medical School Students.

She published "Woman Health - 100 Questions and Answers" (2 tomes, Ed. Medicala); "Mondo Femina" (1992), a dictionary of famous women in Romania, work sponsored by Romanian Government to be sent through External Affair Ministry to all embassies (in 4 languages, 2 tomes); "Third Century Health", Carol Davila Publisher. After her death, the activity of the Nursing School Carol Davila and the Romanian Womens' National Confederation was continued by the Mioara Mincu Humanist Foundation established in 2009.

Honors

- In 2012 Conțești village school was renamed "Școala Gimnazială cu clasele I-VIII Dr. Mioara Mincu" (Mioara Mincu grade I-VIII school).

- School year 2014-2015 was the start of "Liceul Teoretic Dr. Mioara Mincu" (Dr. Mioara Mincu Theoretical Highschool).

Critics

- In February 2005 the Evenimentul Zilei (Daily Event) journal published an article describing Școala Sanitară „Carol Davila” (Nursing School Carol Davila), led by Mioara Mincu, as the host of a network for diplomas release based on bribery.

References

^ http://www.curierulnational.ro/Specializat/2003-12-29/Carol+Davila+a+fost+ales+membru+post-mortem+al+Academiei+Romane ^ http://www.totpal.ro/ziua+mondiala+a+femeii+din+mediul+rural ^ Mincu, Mioara, Dorian, Nadia și Albescu, Ioan Silviu: Curs de limba germană pentru învățământul medical, Sofitech, București, 1998, ISBN: 973-98230-3-3. ^ Mihailide, Mihail: Medici-scriitori și publiciști români - Dicționar biobibliografic, Ed. Viața Medicală Românească, 2003. ^ „Școala cu clasele I-VIII Dr. Mioara Mincu”, http://institutii-publice.org/judetul-dambovita/comuna-contesti.html Accesat: 12 februarie 2014. ^ Barascu, Magda și Neamu, Daniel: Spagă la școala de asistente, Evenimentul Zilei, Vineri, 25 februarie 2005

Bibliography

Ionescu, Cristian: Sănătatea femeii din România în context european (Woman health in Romania in the European context) Pivniceru, Maruca: Mioara Mincu Prof.dr.ing. Gheorghița Jinescu, vicepresident CNFR: Mioara Mincu are vârsta faptelor ei (Mioara Mincu is the age of her own deeds) published in Revista Educație pentru Sănătate (Education for Health Magazine) no.1, pg. 12-14

External links

http://www.interferente.ro/surasul-starile-afective-umane-si-constelatia-endocrina.html http://ghid-practic-acasa.blogspot.ro/2010/09/poate-fi-zambetul-factor-terapeutic.html http://www.interferente.ro/zambetul-si-valoarea-unui-zambet.html http://www.dreaming.ro/interviu-la-confederatia-femeilor/