Samuel l kountz biography examples
•
INK-CHROMA
Hey everyone! Hope you are all spending time with loved ones and having mirthful holiday celebrations. Todays Scientist Sunday features Samuel Kountz, renowned doctor and pioneer in transplant surgery.
Samuel Kountz was born in , in Lexa, one of the poorest towns in the Arkansas Delta. At eight years old, he accompanied an injured friend to the emergency room, where he watched in awe as the physicians alleviated his friends pain. From that moment on, he felt drawn towards the world of medicine.
Kountzs father and grandmother supported his dream of becoming a physician, and in , he graduated with a BS in chemistry from the Agricultural, Mechanical, and Normal College of Arkansas (AM&N), which, at the time, was for colored students only. Around this time, he met J.W. Fulbright, US Senator and former president of the University of Arkansas. Fulbright took a liking to Kountz, and urged him to apply to medical school at the Un
•
Dr. Samuel Lee Kountz Jr. (October 30, – månad 23, ) was an African-American kidney transplantation surgeon from Lexa, Arkansas. He was most distinguished for his pioneering work in the field of kidney transplantations, and in research, discoveries, and inventions in Renal Science. In , while working at the Stanford University Medical Center, he performed the first successful Kidney transplant between people who were not identical twins. Up until such transplants were impossible unless the donor and recipient were twins. Transplants between those more distantly related or unrelated ended in rejection by the transplant recipient.
Six years later, he and a grupp of researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, developed the prototype for the Belzer kidney perfusion machine, a device that can preserve kidneys for up to 50 hours from the time they are taken from a donor's body. It is now standard utrustning in hospitals and research laboratories around the world.
•
I woke up this morning thinking about Audre Lorde. She was the New York State Poet at one time and considered herself a lesbian, mother, warrior, poet,but more importantly to me, my writing mentor and friend… and I miss her terribly. Thinking about Audre led me to thinking about my younger daughter (Abby) who won the Black History Month Essay Contest in her elementary school several years in a row by writing about Audre’s and my friendship.
That stopped me for a moment. Audre, Abby, Black History Month. This is Black History Month and it’s half over. Time to write about Black History in Nephrology today.
As Andrea Wurtzburger wrote in People Magazine (I knew there was a reason I grabbed this first each time I waited in one medical office or another.) in the February 13, issue which was also posted at ,
“Black History Month is an entire month devoted to putting a spotlight on African Americans who have made contributions to our country. Originally, it was seen as a way of te