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Biographies
John Webster Kirklin, MD (1917-2004)
The
founder of the nation’s first formal educational program to
train surgeon assistants, John Webster Kirklin, was also a pioneer
in the development of cardiac surgery. He modified and made clinically
workable a heart-lung bypass machine (Mayo-Gibbon pump) when none
were reliable. He made innovations and taught precision in operative
techniques, patient care, pathophysiology of cardiopulmonary bypass;
and he wrote and co-edited a current standard textbook in cardiac
surgery.
His concept of training surgeon assistants as a
new type of physician assistant in the late 1960s was based upon
his contention that physicians were maldistributed by region and
by specialty, even if there were no actual shortage of them. He
believed that physicians were over-trained in many respects for
tasks they performed and envisioned qualified assistants, properly
trained and supervised, performing some of the more routine tasks
traditionally performed by physicians.
Dr. Kirklin was born in Muncie, Indiana in August,
1917. At the age of eight he moved with his family to Rochester,
Minnesota when his father, a radiologist, was recruited to the Mayo
Clinic. After finishing his undergraduate training at the University
of Minnesota, he attended medical school at Harvard University graduating
magna cum laude in 1942. After interning at the University of Pennsylvania,
he returned to the Mayo Clinic for a residency in surgery in April
1943. In mid-1944 at the peak of World War II, he was inducted into
the Army where he trained in and practiced military neurosurgery
until August 1946. He returned to the Mayo Clinic and completed
his surgical residency there in October 1950. His residency included
spending six months under Dr. Robert Gross at Children’s Hospital,
Boston. He remained on the faculty at Mayo and during the 1950’s
modified the Gibbon heart-lung bypass machine and performed the
first series of successful operations with it. He became Professor
of Surgery in 1960 and Chairman of the Department of Surgery at
the Mayo Clinic in 1964.
The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) recruited him to
chair their Department of Surgery in September 1966. The reason
he left the Mayo Clinic, he later stated, was the question of whether
he wanted to keep on doing, the last fifteen years of his professional
life, what he had done the first fifteen, or whether he wanted to
do something different. He said the environment in Birmingham was
better and freer than in Rochester to bring about his ideas for
a department of surgery and the training of surgeons.
Dr. Kirklin started the UAB’s Surgeon Assistant (SA) Training
Program in 1967 and recruited his wife, Dr. Margaret Kirklin, to
be the program’s first Academic Director. There were initially
four students – three of whom remained at UAB for the rest
of their professional lives. As a general surgical resident in his
research year, Dr. John J. Gleysteen recalls in 1973 being asked
to teach medical physiology to SA students. He found that it was
all he could do to stay one chapter ahead of these eager students
as they navigated through Arthur Guyton’s Textbook of Medical
Physiology.
Dr.
Kirklin was a unique individual and his name invokes a special magic
at UAB. He was energetic and disciplined. An article titled “John
Kirklin – the man behind the Kirklin Clinic” that appeared
in the UAB Magazine 1992 spring/ summer issue states: “In
surgery, as in life in general, Kirklin believes in what works.
He seeks efficiency. And he believes that efficiency is enhanced
by orderliness, by meticulous attention to detail, and by simplicity
and economy ...... He believes that streamlining the surgical process
into a quiet, deliberate ritual creates an atmosphere of calmness
that can, to some extent, counteract human fallibility by freeing
up the surgical team’s mental energies to improvise in a crisis.”
“Kirklin’s meticulousness extended to the details of
his personal appearance which he thought conveyed important ‘signals’
to patients and their families. He was convinced that a disheveled
surgeon provoked anxiety by creating an impression of disorder,
while a surgeon who looked fresh and neat and ‘in control’
was reassuring. So before speaking with patients and their families,
he always shaved, combed his hair, and donned a freshly pressed
and starched white lab coat – regardless of the hour.”
Dr. Kirklin remained Chairman of the Department of Surgery until
1982. He continued his cardiovascular surgery practice, as Director
of that Division, until 1989. Afterward he continued as editor of
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, directed several
multi-institutional studies on various cardiac procedures, and he
came to work early every morning. He produced another edition of
his 2-volume text: “Cardiac Surgery: Morphology, Diagnostic
Criteria, Natural History, Techniques, Results, and Indications”
which came out recently in a third edition authored primarily by
surgeons trained by him at UAB.
His endless curiosity and hunger for new knowledge continued as
quoted in the UAB Magazine article: ‘It’s a fascinating
world’ he says, ‘just fascinating. The unknown is always
fascinating. The mountain is there. You might as well try to climb
it.”
Dr. Kirklin died from complications of a head injury in April,
2004.
Acknowledgement: We thank Dr. John J. Gleysteen for preparing and
editing this biographic sketch of Dr. John W. Kirklin.

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