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  1. After his hand fellowship at the Indiana Hand to Shoulder Center, he did an additional six months of microvascular surgery training at Duke University, and six months of hand education at multiple centers in Switzerland and Germany before joining us in practice.

  2. After his hand fellowship at the Indiana Hand to Shoulder Center, he did an additional six months of microvascular surgery training at Duke University, and six months of hand education at multiple centers in Switzerland and Germany before joining us in practice.

  3. In 1956, while he was an active general surgeon also working on many animal experiments, Fisher got a call from his former mentor during his fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. I.S. Ravdin, who was then the chairman of the Clinical Studies Panel of the Cancer Chemotherapy National Service Center at the NIH, and formerly had been a ...

  4. Nov 23, 2019 · He was born in Pittsburgh, PA, USA, on Aug 23, 1918, and died there on Oct 16, 2019, aged 101 years. “No clinical therapy should be determined by emotion or conviction”, said Bernard Fisher, Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (UPSM), in 2009.

  5. Dec 13, 2019 · As a pioneer trialist, Dr. Fisher confronted and found solutions to the major challenges to the effective design and administration of large scale, multi‐institutional, randomized studies, an experience that has taught the oncology field the value of careful oversight of quality control.

  6. Jun 3, 2020 · Born in Pittsburgh on August 23, 1918, Dr. Fisher’s early school career was marked by a love and talent for science. He graduated from Taylor Allderdice High School in 1936 and attended the University of Pittsburgh Medical School.

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  8. Abstract. The history of microvascular surgery is intimately linked to that of vascular surgery. Microvascular techniques, developed mainly in China, Japan, Australia, and the United States of America, built on the principles of vascular anastomosis established by pioneers in France, Germany, Italy, and the United States of America.

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