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"In
1927 I was glad to accept a place on the Medical Faculty at Wisconsin.
Objectives of that position from the beginning have been fourfold.
In order of their importance they still remain: (1) to provide the
best possible service to patients of the institution; (2) to teach
what is known of Anesthesiology to all candidates for their medical
degree; (3) to help long-term graduate students not only to gain
a fundamental knowledge of the subject and to master the art of
administration, but also to learn as much as possible of the effective
methods of teaching; (4) to accompany these efforts with the encouragement
of as much cooperative investigation is consistent with achieving
the first objectives."
-Dr. Ralph M. Waters, 1948.
The arrival of Ralph M. Waters as a faculty
member at the new medical school of the University of Wisconsin
in 1927 marked the beginning of the modern era in Anesthesiology.
Instruction in anesthesia was nonexistent and the field was practiced
by only a few self-taught men. Dr. Waters' contributions to the
specialty over the ensuing decades are legendary. Foremost, however,
was his contribution to anesthesia education. In creating the first
academic program of Anesthesiology in the United States here at
the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Dr. Waters began a legacy of
excellence that lives to this day.
It is with pride that the principles Dr. Waters
espoused of superior patient care, teaching, and research continue
to guide the University of Wisconsin Department of Anesthesiology.
The September
2001 ASA Newsletter has several articles on Ralph M. Waters.
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