Paul Bruce Beeson (18 October 1908 – 14 August 2006) was an American physician and professor of medicine, specializing in infectious diseases and the pathogenesis of fever.[3][4]
When experts predicted that Britain would suffer epidemics of infectious disease during the war, Harvard University and the American Red Cross gave Britain a complete fever hospital consisting of prefabricated wooden huts, shipped across the Atlantic during the Blitz along with volunteer doctors and nurses. Beeson spent two years at Harvard Hospital near Salisbury as a volunteer, returning to the US in 1942 when the epidemics did not materialise.[4]
With typical generosity, he retired from the chair in Oxford a year earlier than he needed so his successor, David Weatherall, could have a hand in designing the new department which was to be created at the John Radcliffe Hospital.[3]
Beeson and Petersdorf published a clinical study of patients with persistent fevers of unknown cause – they suggested guidelines for diagnosing the causes.[1][5]
The study, published in the journal Medicine in 1961, was "a landmark paper," said Dr. Lawrence S. Cohen, a cardiologist-internist and professor of medicine at Yale. Dr. Cohen said it was "as relevant in 2006 as in 1961, in pointing out causes that were not obvious and teaching clinicians what they should be thinking about in making a differential diagnosis".[1]
In 1981 the Yale School of Medicine established the Paul B. Beeson professorship in internal medicine.[3]
From 1950 to 1954 he was editor for Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (London, McGraw-Hill). From 1959 to 1982 he was a co-editor for the Cecil-Loeb Textbook of Medicine (Philadelphia/London, Saunders).[6] He published The Eosinophil (Philadelphia/London, Saunders) in 1977.[3] For The Oxford Companion to Medicine (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1986), he was a co-editor with Sir Ronald Bodley Scott and then with Lord Walton after Bodley Scott's death.[4]
William Hollingsworth's Taking Care: The Legacy of Soma Weiss, Eugene Stead and Paul Beeson (1995)[7] and Richard Rapport's Physician: The Life of Paul Beeson (2001)[8] explain the importance of Beeson's career.[4]
Beeson married in 1942.[3] Upon his death he was survived by his widow, two sons, a daughter, six grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.[1]
↑Atkins, Elisha (4 May 1995). "Review of Taking Care: The legacy of Soma Weiss, Eugene Stead, and Paul Beeson by William Hollingsworth". N Engl J Med. 332 (18): 1242–1243. doi:10.1056/NEJM199505043321821.
↑Finch, Stuart C. (20 December 2001). "Review of Physician: The Life of Paul Beeson by Richard Rapport". N Engl J Med. 345 (25): 1858. doi:10.1056/NEJM200112203452520.