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The Statesmanship of William Crawford Gorgas, M.D., Surgeon General, Medical Corps, United States Army.

Authors :
GANDY, ROY E.
CHRISTOPHER, RAVEN M.
RODNING, CHARLES B.
Source :
American Surgeon. Mar2017, Vol. 83 Issue 3, p221-232. 12p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

If statesmanship can be characterized as a bed rock of principles, a strong moral compass, a vision, and an ability to articulate and effect that vision, then the fortitude, tenacity, imperturbability, and resilience of William Crawford Gorgas cannot be overestimated. As Chief Sanitary Officer in Cuba and as Chief Medical Officer in Panama, he actualized strategies to eradicate the vectors of yellow fever and malaria. His superiors initially pigeonholed his requisitions, refused to provide him with any authority, and clamored for his dismissal. Nevertheless, with dogged persistence he created a coalition of the willing, who eventually implemented those reforms. As Surgeon General in the United States Army, he organized and expanded the Active Duty and Medical Reserve Corps in anticipation of World War I. Skilled university affiliated surgeons and personnel from throughout North America, manned base hospitals in Europe. Those lessons impacted upon subsequent military and civilian surgical care-organizationally, logistically, and clinically. He was universally recognized for his bonhomie, savoir-faire, modesty, discretion, decorum, courtesy, and graciousness. To those attributes must be added his devotion to duty, discipline, integrity, and authenticity, which characterized his leadership and statesmanship. Those attributes are most worthy of emulation and perpetuation by clinicians, academicians, educators, and investigators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00031348
Volume :
83
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Surgeon
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
121940408
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/000313481708300316