"Ignaz Semmelweis Saved Lives: Wash Your Hands"

by Dr. Howard Markel

On this date in 1850, a prickly Hungarian obstetrician named Ignaz Semmelweis stepped up to the podium of the Vienna Medical Society’s lecture hall. It was a grand and ornately decorated room where some of medicine’s great discoveries were first announced. The evening of May 15 would hardly be different—even if those present (and many more who merely read about it) did not acknowledge Semmelweis’s marvelous discovery for several decades.

What, exactly, was the doctor’s advice to his colleagues on that long ago night? It could be summed up in three little words: wash your hands!

Use the excerpt from “In 1850, Ignaz Semmelweis saved lives with three words: wash your hands” to answer the question. The excerpt is the beginning of an article.
Which fact from this introduction is most likely to be in the conclusion of the article?(1 point)
Responses

The obstetrician advised doctors to wash their hands.
The obstetrician advised doctors to wash their hands.

Many people who did not attend the lecture read about the event.
Many people who did not attend the lecture read about the event.

The lecture hall was ornately decorated.
The lecture hall was ornately decorated.

Many great discoveries were announced in the lecture hall.

1 answer

The fact from the introduction that is most likely to be in the conclusion of the article is:

The obstetrician advised doctors to wash their hands.

This statement directly relates to the key message of the article and emphasizes the significance of Semmelweis's discovery, which would be reiterated in the conclusion.

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