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Biographies
Marvin L. Gliedman, MD (1929-2001)
As
Professor of Surgery at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine,
and Chief of Surgery at its major teaching hospital, the Montefiore
Medical Center, Marvin L. Gliedman, MD, played a pivotal role in
employing physician assistants (PAs) as members of the surgical
house staff and developing the country’s first postgraduate
surgical PA residency program. He was born in 1929 and reared in
Brooklyn, NY as an only child whose family was in the lighting fixture
business. He attended Syracuse University where he captained the
University’s fencing team. By taking extra credits each semester,
he was able to graduate Magna Cum Laude in three years.
He started his medical training at the State University of New
York, Downstate Medical School, where he spent a good portion of
his senior year involved with research projects in the Surgical
Research Laboratory. He interned at the University of Minnesota,
and returned to Downstate and the Kings County Hospital Center to
begin his residency in general surgery. After one year, he entered
the Navy, and was assigned to St. Albans Naval Hospital in Queens,
NY where he was asked to establish a pulmonary laboratory. He convinced
his superiors that a first-rate pulmonary lab required a cardiac
catheterization function, and established the first one in New York
City. A team of Navy medics, whom he trained, preformed the catherizations.
One of the medics was trained to recognize premature atrial contractions,
and sat by the monitor calling out, “PAC!” whenever
appropriate. The second recognized PVCs and did the same with them.
The third, the leader of the team, introduced and advanced the catheter.
The last member of the team monitored the pressures. All this was
15 years before the advent of the PA concept as we know it today.
While at St. Albans, Dr. Gliedman managed a monthly pulmonary clinic
at the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital on Staten Island, which
later became the site of the Purser Mate Marine PA Program (established
in 1970). Since his two years at St. Albans counted as part of his
residency, he returned and completed his final two years of residency
at Downstate. It was during this time that he developed a close
working relationship with Dr. Richard G. Rosen, a junior resident,
who would later assist him in employing and training PA residents.
In January, 1967, Dr. Gliedman was appointed Professor of Surgery
at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and Chief of Surgery
at its major teaching hospital, the Montefiore Medical Center. Dr.
Rosen was recruited as his second-in-command. In 1971 Dr. Gliedman
became chairman of the Combined Departments of Surgery at the Medical
School and Surgeon-in-Chief at the four major hospitals in the complex:
Montefiore, the Weiler Hospital, Bronx Municipal Hospital, and the
Lincoln Hospital. When North Central Bronx Hospital was built, it
replaced Lincoln which reverted to community control.
Concerned about both the over-production of surgeons through post-graduate
education, together with the increasing complexity of surgical care
and surgical practice, Dr. Gliedman seized upon the idea of exploring
the use of physician assistants to solve both problems. In 1970
he sent Dr. Rosen to Duke University to investigate the nature and
level of PA education, and, if appropriate, recruit a few PAs to
work at Montefiore. They wanted to determine if PAs could function
as members of the surgical house staff. The first two Duke-trained
PAs arrived at the Medical Center in 1971. Based upon their success,
additional PAs were hired each year to replace, on a one-to-one
basis, some of the surgical house staff. One of the first PA recruits,
Ms. Clara Vanderbilt, joined Dr. Gliedman and Dr. Rosen to establish
the first PA surgical postgraduate program in the country. Today,
Montefiore Medical Center employs over 200 PAs, more than any other
institution.
Dr. Gliedman resigned as Chairman in 1991, although he stayed on
the faculty and was actively teaching and operating up until two
weeks before his death in November 2001. He had a cultivated appreciation
of art, enjoyed the many galleries and museums in New York, and
made it a point to sample the museums in each city he visited. Salt-water
fishing was his main warm weather source of relaxation.
Acknowledgements: We thank Dr. Richard Rosen, Mrs. Natalie Gliedman
and Ms. Clara Vanderbilt for their assistance in preparing and editing
this biographic sketch of Dr. Marvin Gliedman.

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