Sickle cell Pionner : William Warrick Cardozo

Publié le 06 avril 2014 par Halleyjc

*William Warrick Cardozo was born on this date in 1905. He was an African American physician and pediatrician.

From Washington D.C. Cardozo attended the public schools in his hometown. His father was Frederick Lewis Cardozo and his mother was Blanche Warrick. He also attended Hampton Institute and went to Ohio State University where he received his AB in 1929 and MD in 1933. He was an intern at City Hospital and took a two-year fellowship at Children’s Hospital and Provident Hospital in Chicago. He is best remembered for his pioneering investigations into sickle cell anemia.

Cardozo’s ground breaking paper, “Immunologic Studies of Sickle Cell anemia,” appeared in the Archives of Internal Medicine, October 1937. That same year he left the Midwest to begin a private practice and join Freedmen’s Hospital and the Howard University College of Medicine. Cardozo worked for 26 years as a school medical inspector for the District of Columbia Board of health. He would later be promoted to clinical assistant professor and clinical associate professor of pediatrics. In addition to his work on sickle cell anemia, Cardozo studied and published research in children’s gastrointestinal disorders, Hodgkin's disease, and the early growth and development of black children.

He also served for twenty-four years as a medical inspector for the District of Columbia Board of Health. William Warrick Cardozo passed away suddenly in Washington, D.C. on August 11, 1962, after suffering a massive heart attack.

Reference:
The Descendants of Abraham Navarro Nunes of Amsterdam
(1567?-1645)
Related Families Version 1 1995
Jeffrey Adler

La version française de cet anniversaire vous a été donnée l'année dernière à la même date anniversaire :

http://halleyjc.blog.lemonde.fr/2013/04/06/william-warrick-cardozo-1905-1962-pionnier-de-la-recherche-sur-la-drepanocytose/