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(Excerpted and adapted from the program
of a 1991
Symposium at the NYU School of Medicine honoring Saul Krugman)

Dr. Saul Krugman |
The first scientific article Saul Krugman wrote appeared when he
was 39 years old; he eventually wrote more than 250 articles, and
was the co-author of a leading text on infectious diseases, Krugman’s
Infectious Diseases of Children, with a tenth edition published
in 1998. His most frequently cited article, “Infectious Hepatitis:
Evidence for Two Distinctive Clinical, Epidemiological, and Immunological
Types of Infection” JAMA , 200(5):365-73, 1967, appears in
Morton’s Medical Bibliography, a compilation of the most important
works in the history of medicine. (See abstracts of Krugman’s
five most cited articles, or view his
entire bibliography)
The focus of Dr. Krugman’s efforts was the prevention and
control of infectious diseases. He and his colleagues evaluated
and helped formulate the policies for clinical use of the newly
developed vaccines against poliomeyelitis, measles, rubella and
hepatitis B. In the course of these efforts, he actively participated
in studies around the world – Nigeria, Israel, Greece, Taiwan,
Japan, New Zealand – giving generously
of his knowledge and experience.
Dr. Krugman’s most important scientific achievements were
in the unraveling of the mysteries of “infectious hepatitis.”
In the mid-1950’s, endemic infectious diseases punctuated
by epidemics were a constant cause for concern at the Willowbrook
State School. The Medical Superintendent turned for assistance to
Saul Krugman and his close friend and colleague, Robert
Ward, as experts in infectious diseases. The problem of measles,
lethal in that environment, was quickly solved with the new vaccine,
which was licensed in the U.S. in 1963. Hepatitis, however, absorbed
the energies of Krugman and Ward, later joined by Joan Giles, for
many years.
Starting with careful clinical and epidemiological studies, they
discovered that virtually the entire patient population and staff
became infected shortly after arrival at the institution unless
they had been previously infected. Most infections had gone unrecognized
until Krugman and Ward arrived. And more surprisingly two clinically
distinct types of hepatitis, now known as hepatitis A and B, actually
co-existed at Willowbrook. The many cases of so-called “relapse”
had actually been reinfections with a different virus.
An inspired leap of imagination led to exposing pooled serum from
patients with hepatitis B to a temperature of 98 degrees Fahrenheit
for just one minute. Administration of the serum to susceptible
subjects conferred immunity without causing infection. The course
was now set for the eventual control of hepatitis B, the more serious
of the two diseases. The uniqueness of an experiment that required
only a hot plate, needle and syringe to perform, and yet had such
enormous health implications was accorded an immediate, enthusiastic
reception by the medical community.
Other
Awards and Honors
1967 - Haven Emerson Award
1972 - Modern Medicine Award
James D. Bruce Memorial Award
John M. Russell Award (Markle Foundation)
Charles H. Hood Foundation’s Child Health Award
1972-73 - President, American Pediatric Society,
1972-1973
1974-75 - Vice-President, American Epidemiological
Society
1975 - The Grulee Award, American Academy of
Pediatrics
1976 - The Gold Medal Award, Phi Lambda Kappa
Fraternity
1977 - Elected Fellow, American Academy of
Arts and Sciences
1978 - New York Academy of Medicine Medal
Robert Koch Gold Medal Award
1979 - Honorary Doctor of Science, Ohio State
University
1982 - Hellenic Red Cross Gold Medal
Herman M. Biggs Memorial Medal
1983 - Infectious Diseases Society of America
Citation
1985 - Albert B. Sabin Medal, German Pediatric
Association
Karl Landsteiner Memorial Award
Alexander Wiener Memorial Lecture, New York Blood Center
1986 - Elected Senior Member, Institute of
Medicine, National Academy of Sciences
First Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society Award
1987 - Elected to the Order of Sciences, Academy
of Athens, Greece
New York Academy of Sciences Sarah L. Poiley Memorial Award
1988 - William Beaumont Prize in Gastroenterology
1990 - American Liver Foundation Distinguished
Service Award
Medical College of Virginia Outstanding Medical Alumnus Award
1991 - Gordon Wilson Lecturer, American Clinical
and Climatological Association
1992 - Honored at the Fifth Annual Cold Spring
Harbor Conference (dedicated to Drs. Saul Krugman, Maurice Hilleman
and Fritz Deinhardt)
1993 - First Annual Saul Krugman Symposium
on Pediatrics Viral Infections
Miami Children’s Hospital – Ambassador David M.
Walters Hall of Fame Award |
Tackling a major world problem and offering a solution is enough
to earn an individual a place in medical history. But Krugman gave
the world much more than that. Author of the leading text in infectious
diseases, popular lecturer and indefatigable traveler, he was well-known
to clinicians. Generous to his colleagues with those precious, meticulously
annotated frozen serum samples and equally valuable advice, he was
just as familiar to academicians. Possessed of extensive experience
and excellent judgement, Saul Krugman was commonly called upon to
participate in health policy decisions here and abroad: consultant
to the Bureau of Biologics, member of the WHO Expert Advisory Panel
on Virus Diseases, Chairman of the Hepatitis Panel of the U.S.-Japan
Cooperative Program, Deputy Director of the Commission on Viral
Infections for the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board, among others.
For over 50 years, Saul Krugman was tireless in pursuit of his
professional ideals. His remarkable steadfastness in purpose enabled
him to continue his work in the face of severe criticism. Time has
vindicated his actions. In addition to the Lasker
Public Service Award, the National Academy of Sciences elected
him as member in 1976. These accolades were but two of many honors
received over the course of his lengthy and distinguished career.
Of those many honors, which began with membership in the Alpha
Omega Alpha Honorary Society, and continued until 1994, when the
New York State Department of Health gave him its Immunization Award,
two of the most significant bestowed on Krugman by his peers were
the Howland award and the Bristol award.
Widely considered to be the most prestigious award in the field
of pediatrics, the John Howland medal
honors those whose research and teaching have contributed to the
advancement of pediatrics and to the improvement of children’s
health. In 1981, members of the American Pediatric Society (APS)
bestowed this, their highest honor, on Saul Krugman.
The Infectious Diseases Society of America also honored Krugman
with a prestigious award. In 1976, the same year he was elected
to the National Academy of Sciences, the IDSA named Krugman as the
recipient of the Bristol award, in recognition
of his thirty years of accomplishments and contributions to the
acquisition and dissemination of knowledge about infectious diseases.
In April 1991, on the occasion of his 80th birthday, Saul Krugman
was honored with a Festschrift. (See Program
of symposium in PDF) A Festschrift is a memorial volume,
made up of articles contributed by pupils or associates and friends
of a scientist or leader, published usually to honor some special
occasion, such as a birthday or other anniversary.
(A few pages of the Festschrift, published
in Pediatrics, are available in PDF, courtesy of the American
Academy of Pediatrics.)

Saul Krugman, the son of Russian immigrants, was born in the Bronx
in 1911. The family, including older sister Shirley and younger
brother Seymour, later moved to Paterson, NJ, where Saul graduated
from high school at the age of 18. A member of the student council
and the debate team, Krugman also loved to dance and was a member
of the high school’s drama club. He began his undergraduate
studies at Ohio State University in 1929, and after taking time
off following his junior year to earn money so he could complete
his studies, Krugman graduated from the University of Richmond (Virginia)
in 1934.
He earned his medical degree from
the Medical College of Virginia in 1939, and shortly after graduation
began a two-year rotating internship at Cumberland Hospital in Brooklyn.
Krugman met his future wife, Sylvia Stern, in 1939, when her brother
Michael introduced them. The two married on February 18, 1940 and
soon had two children – Richard, who joined his father in the
medical field as a pediatrician, and who currently serves as the Dean
of the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Denver, and Carol,
a professional meeting planner who heads her own company, based in
Florida. One of his four grandsons, Scott, has continued the family
tradition of becoming a pediatrician, earning his degree at Dartmouth
Medical College. He currently practices in Baltimore.

In June 1941, with the United States heading for war,
Saul Krugman entered the U.S. Army Air Corps as a flight
surgeon. Captain Krugman served until 1946, and spent almost
his entire military career in the South Pacific Theater. In one
13-month period, from August 1944 to September 1945, Krugman logged
over 115,000 miles, primarily on air evacuation missions.
He earned several honors
during his military service, including a Bronze Battle Star for
his Asiatic-Pacific Theater Ribbon after the South Philippines campaign,
and Bronze Battle Stars for the Asiatic-Pacific Theater Ribbon after
the Luzon and New Guinea campaigns. His initiative and excellent
work were recognized by his superiors, and earned him a verbal commendation
from the Commanding General of the Pacific Division as well as praise
from Colonel Robert Brua of the Pacific Division’s Air Transport
Command Medical Corps.
Following his discharge from Active Duty in February
1946, Captain Krugman returned to New York City, where he took a
position as an Intern at Willard Parker Hospital. Taking advantage
of an opportunity to work with Drs. Robert Ward and L.
Emmett Holt Jr., Dr. Krugman soon moved to Bellevue Hospital,
where, although he began as an “externe” (an intern
without a salary) he steadily moved up the ranks, becoming Director
of the Pediatric Service in 1960. In addition, Krugman was a professor
of Pediatrics at the New York University School of Medicine, where
he served as Chairman of that department from 1960-1974. During
this time, he began the research on infectious diseases that would
come to be the dominant focus of his career, earning him international
recognition, including the prestigious Lasker Public Service Award
in 1983.

After a stroke in 1991, he recuperated for a while
in Florida, but continued to spend time in his lab in New York.
Saul Krugman loved his work, and reluctantly retired from the NYU
faculty in September 1995, at the age of 84. He moved to Florida
with his wife Sylvia, and suffered a second
stroke in early October. On October 26, 1995, Saul Krugman died
of a cerebral thrombosis. At the time of his death, NYU Department
of Pediatrics Chairman Dr. Wade Parks said of Krugman, “Saul
Krugman has done more to eliminate pediatric infectious diseases
than any other person ever.” Krugman’s obituary in the
New York Times read, in part:
He was a distinguished teacher, scientist and
physician,
respected by his colleagues and peers, and beloved by students.
A national figure with an international reputation,
he was the ideal of the physician and scientist.
He combined the vast knowledge of pediatrics with
the great abilities of an innovative and imaginative
investigator to the enormous benefit to patient care.
More
information about the
Saul Krugman Exhibit |