Dr. Ignacio V. Ponseti, an orthopedist whose gentle, nonsurgical method of correcting clubfoot has become the global standard for treatment, helping thousands of children to walk, died Sunday in Iowa ...
Ted Ponseti, a Navy signalman during the D-Day invasion of Europe and later a globe-trotting record executive, died April 30 at his Santa Rosa home. He was 86. Ponseti grew up in New Orleans, the ...
Dr. Ignacio Ponseti, a refugee from the Spanish Civil War who created a nonsurgical way of treating clubfoot in infants that prevented a lifetime of disability, died Oct. 18 at the University of Iowa ...
While riding in a taxi cab with wife Helena Ponseti and son Bill on a vacation to Spain, Ignacio Ponseti noticed the driver had an interesting name. Ponseti, perhaps the UI’s most well-known medical ...
The Gazette offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced. CORALVILLE - Of the many people who came to pay tribute Sunday to the late Dr. Ignacio Ponseti, perhaps ...
A $1 million gift to the University of Iowa Foundation from two UI graduates will enable the UI to continue the pioneering work of the late Dr. Ignacio Ponseti in countries around the world. The gift, ...
Mary Snyder found out at her 19-week ultrasound that her unborn baby had clubfoot. Both of the fetus's feet were completely turned inward, forming the twisted U-shape typical of clubfoot. The ...
Ponseti’s Shoes, now in their 54th year, started in 1965 when Jack Ponseti decided the children’s footwear industry needed more attention. He created a whole store focused specifically on children’s ...
Ignacio Ponseti, who died on October 18 aged 95, was a pioneer in paediatric orthopaedics and the inventor of the Ponseti Method, a cheap yet revolutionary way of treating clubfoot in babies which has ...