All Articles (60)
News
Sep 21, 2011
The Boy in the Bubble
To anyone under 30, David Phillip Vetter is more an idea than a person. He is a phrase in a Paul Simon song, a character in a Seinfeld episode, the subject of a PBS documentary and the inspiration for movies.
News
Oct 13, 2011
Breast Cancer Activist
After her breast cancer diagnosis, Lydia J. Cosumano made awareness, detection, and finding a cure her focus.
Whether you need help writing an obituary, or are ready to publish. We can help.
News
Oct 19, 2011
Breast Cancer Doc
Dr. Raza Ali Dilawari, who worked to fight breast cancer, was considered the premier surgical oncologist in the mid-South.
News
Oct 29, 2011
He Fixed Hearts
Wilson Greatbatch invented the implantable cardiac pacemaker, keeping millions of hearts beating in rhythm.
News
Jan 31, 2012
Richard Olney, ALS Researcher and Patient
Dr. Richard Olney didn't have ALS when he began searching for a cure for the disease.
News
Apr 12, 2012
Clara Barton, Battlefield Angel
One hundred years ago today, Clara Barton died, leaving behind an enormous humanitarian legacy.
News
Oct 1, 2014
Ebola Victims Gone, Not Forgotten
As the Ebola epidemic spreads in West Africa, families of the victims are facing a confusing and heartbreaking situation.
News
Jan 20, 2015
What You Learn From a Near-Death Experience
Most people are afraid to die, but a near-death experience can change that.
News
Jan 26, 2015
“Being Mortal” by Dr. Atul Gawande
A surgeon and best-selling author shares some of his latest work.
Advice & Support
Jun 12, 2015
When Doctor Becomes Patient
Kate Granger, a doctor who was diagnosed with terminal cancer three years ago, has made it her mission to make treatment more compassionate. She was kind enough to talk with Legacy about what she’s learned from living with terminal illness—and how doctors can better serve their patients.
News
Oct 23, 2015
Dr. Arnold Klein (1945–2015)
Dr. Arnold Klein, dermatologist to the late Michael Jackson and other Hollywood celebrities, has died in Palm Springs, California, according to The Associated Press. He was 70.
News
Nov 18, 2016
Denton Cooley (1920 - 2016), pioneer in open heart surgery
Dr. Denton A. Cooley, the surgeon who performed the world's first artificial heart implant, died Friday, Nov. 18, 2016. He was 96.
News
Dec 17, 2016
Henry Heimlich (1920 - 2016), Heimlich maneuver inventor
Henry Heimlich, the physician who was known best for inventing the anti-choking Heimlich maneuver, died Saturday, Dec. 17, 2016, in Cincinnati, Ohio, according to multiple news sources. He was 96.
News
Feb 8, 2017
Hans Rosling (1948 - 2017), star of TED Talks
Hans Rosling, a Swedish medical doctor and statistician who made data come alive during worldwide presentations, died Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2017, in Uppsala, Sweden, according to multiple news sources. He was 68. He died about a year after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. Born July 27, 1948, in Uppsala, Sweden, he studied statistics and medicine at Uppsala University in Sweden, and he studied public health in India. After receiving his medical degree, he tracked a rare disease in rural Africa and discovered its cure. In 1993, Rosling co-founded the Swedish branch of the international humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders, a nongovernmental entity that helps people in war-torn and developing countries.
News
Feb 9, 2017
Peter Mansfield (1933 - 2017), MRI inventor
The British scientist was co-winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize for his work in inventing the revolutionary MRI scanner.
News
Apr 19, 2017
Thanks, Scientists! (video)
A video tribute to scientists whose work have saved lives.
News
Jun 5, 2017
Babatunde Osotimehin (1949 - 2017), United Nations Population Fund director
U.N. Population Fund director fought for girls’, women’s rights...
News
Jan 31, 2018
RIP to 6 Cancer Fighters
These cancer doctors, nurses, and scientists devoted their lives to helping others.
News
Mar 4, 2018
Roger Bannister (1929–2018), runner who broke 4-minute mile barrier
Roger Bannister, the British runner who was the first to break the 4-minute mile barrier, died Saturday, March 3, 2018, according to The Associated Press. He was 88.
News
Mar 9, 2018
John Sulston (1942–2018), scientist helped decode human genome
John Sulston, Nobel Prize-winning British scientist who helped decode the human genome.
News
Feb 1, 2019
Stewart Adams (1923–2019), inventor of ibuprofen, used himself as test subject
“I always felt it was important to take the first dose.”
News
Feb 28, 2019
Bill Jenkins (1945–2019), tried to end Tuskegee syphilis experiment
Bill Jenkins was an epidemiologist and government whistleblower who tried to bring an end to the Tuskegee syphilis experiment by exposing it as racist and unethical. The study began in 1932 when 600 black men, 399 of whom had syphilis, were recruited for a study in exchange for free health care. The study quietly continued for four decades, during which time the men were denied emerging treatments for syphilis and allowed to pass the disease along to their wives and children. When Jenkins joined the Public Health Service in 1967, he learned about the still-ongoing experiment and began working to bring it to the public's attention so it could be stopped. After others got involved in whistleblowing the study's poor methods, a governmental hearing deemed the study problematic and it came to an end in 1972. A subsequent lawsuit brought monetary compensation to the remaining subjects and their survivors, and years later, Jenkins led the effort to get an official apology from President Bill Clinton to the victims of the experiment and their families.
News
Mar 26, 2020
John F. Murray (1927–2020), top lung disease doctor
John F. Murray was a doctor who spent his career studying and treating lung disease whose work will be instrumental in fighting COVID-19.
News
Apr 7, 2020
William Frankland (1912–2020), founding father of allergy medicine
Dr. William Frankland was a pioneering allergist who popularized pollen count reporting and helped develop the science behind allergy shots.
News
Apr 9, 2020
Charlotte Figi (2006–2020), medical cannabis advocate and CBD pioneer
Charlotte Figi was a Colorado girl who helped normalize medical cannabis and CBD as she used it to relieve her Dravet syndrome, a catastrophic form of epilepsy.
News
May 5, 2020
Takuo Aoyagi (1936–2020), pulse oximeter inventor
Takuo Aoyagi was a Japanese engineer who developed technology that made the modern pulse oximeter possible, allowing us to measure the level of oxygen in the blood.
News
May 7, 2020
Richard C. Friedman (1941–2020), doctor who showed homosexuality was biological
Richard C. Friedman was a psychiatrist whose groundbreaking 1988 book, “Male Homosexuality: A Contemporary Psychoanalytic Perspective,” showed that homosexuality was largely biological, rather than a perversion that needed to be cured.
News
Jun 15, 2020
Tomisaku Kawasaki (1925–2020), pediatrician who identified Kawasaki disease
Tomisaku Kawasaki was a Japanese pediatrician who was the first to identify the inflammatory syndrome in children that became known as Kawasaki disease.
News
Jun 25, 2020
William Dement (1928–2020), sleep doctor who coined the term “REM”
Dr. William Dement was a scientist who developed the field of sleep research and coined the term “REM,” or rapid eye movement, to describe the stage of sleep when dreaming takes place.
News
Jul 14, 2020
Flossie Wong-Staal (1946–2020), pioneering HIV researcher
Flossie Wong-Staal was a molecular virologist whose research on HIV was crucial in the development of blood tests to detect the virus.
News
Aug 3, 2020
Connie Culp (1963–2020), first U.S. recipient of a partial face transplant
Connie Culp was the first U.S. recipient of a partial face transplant, who lived longer than any other face transplant recipient to date.
News
Sep 11, 2020
Seymour Schwartz (1928–2020), founding editor of definitive surgery textbook
Seymour Schwartz was the founding editor of an influential and essential medical textbook, “Schwartz’s Principles of Surgery.”
News
Sep 30, 2020
Timothy Ray Brown (1966–2020), first person cured of HIV infection
Timothy Ray Brown was known as the “Berlin patient,” the first person who was known to have been cured of HIV infection.
News
Dec 17, 2020
Darold Treffert (1933–2020), autism researcher who consulted on “Rain Man”
Darold Treffert was a psychiatrist whose pioneering research helped us better understand autism and savant syndrome.
News
Feb 1, 2021
Andrew Brooks (1969–2021), scientist who developed first COVID-19 spit test
Andrew Brooks was a research professor at Rutgers University and CEO of Infinity Biologix, who developed the first FDA-approved rapid saliva test for COVID-19.
News
Mar 25, 2021
José Baselga (1959–2021), oncologist who revolutionized breast cancer treatment
Jos é Baselga was a Spanish oncologist who developed highly effective new drugs for treating breast cancer.
News
Sep 28, 2021
Freddie Fu (1950–2021), pioneer in knee surgery
Dr. Freddie Fu was an orthopaedic surgeon who pioneered new techniques for more successful ACL repair surgery.
News
Nov 2, 2021
Dr. Aaron Beck (1921–2021), father of cognitive therapy
Dr. Aaron Beck was a psychotherapist who was a pioneer in the development of cognitive behavioral therapy.
News
Nov 30, 2021
Sherif Zaki (1955–2021), CDC pathologist who studied Ebola, COVID-19
Sherif Zaki was a pathologist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) who studied infectious diseases including Ebola, SARS, and COVID-19.
News
Feb 1, 2022
Jeremiah Stamler (1919–2022), doctor who linked diet and heart disease
Dr. Jeremiah Stamler was a doctor whose research proved that cardiovascular disease was linked to our diet and lifestyle.
News
Feb 11, 2022
Luc Montagnier (1932–2022), Nobel winner who co-discovered HIV
Luc Montagnier was a virologist who shared a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for co-discovering HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
News
Feb 22, 2022
Dr. Paul Farmer (1959–2022), global health humanitarian
Dr. Paul Farmer was a co-founder of the nonprofit health organization Partners In Health whose mission is to provide proper health care for people around the world living in poverty.
News
Mar 31, 2022
Arthur D. Riggs (1939–2022), helped develop synthetic insulin for diabetes treatment
Arthur D. Riggs was a pioneer of biotechnology who helped develop synthetic insulin to treat diabetes.
News
Feb 23, 2023
Paul Berg (1926–2023), Nobel-winning genetics scientist
Paul Berg was an American biochemist whose work in gene splicing helped lay the foundations for the biotech industry.
News
Jun 1, 2023
Harald zur Hausen (1936–2023), Nobel Prize-winning virologist
Harald zur Hausen was a Nobel Prize-winning German virologist who discovered the link between HPV and cervical cancer, and whose work led to the development of a vaccine against cancer-causing human papilloma viruses.
News
Jul 14, 2023
Evelyn M. Witkin (1921–2023), discovered how DNA repairs itself
Evelyn M. Witkin was an award-winning geneticist whose discoveries about how DNA repairs itself opened the door to advances in cancer treatment.
News
Sep 12, 2023
Ferid Murad (1936–2023), Nobel Prize-winning doctor
Ferid Murad was a doctor and pharmacologist who won the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his research into how nitric oxide treats heart disease.
News
Oct 18, 2023
Roland Griffiths (1946–2023), psychedelic-assisted therapies pioneer
Roland Griffiths was a psychopharmacologist and psychedelics researcher who helped pioneer the study of psychedelic-assisted therapy for depression, anxiety, addiction, and PTSD.
News
Jan 3, 2024
Sidney M. Wolfe (1937–2024), physician who challenged drug companies
Sidney M. Wolfe was a consumer health watchdog and physician who challenged both drug companies and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and he campaigned to have unsafe drugs taken off the market.
News
Jan 17, 2024
Roy Calne (1930–2024), pioneering organ transplant surgeon
Roy Calne was a British surgeon who specialized in organ transplants, working with the teams who conducted the first liver transplant, intestinal transplant, and several pioneering combined transplants.
