Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Arnold Klebs

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Fields
  
Microbiology

Parents
  
Edwin Klebs

Alma mater
  
University of Basel

Education
  
University of Basel

Name
  
Arnold Klebs

Influenced
  
Harvey Cushing

Role
  
Edwin Klebs' son


Arnold Klebs

Institutions
  
Johns Hopkins University National Tuberculosis Institute

Known for
  
Work with Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Influences
  
William Osler Edwin Klebs William H. Welch

Died
  
March 6, 1943, Nyon, Switzerland

Books
  
Incunabula scientifica et medica

Residence
  
United States of America, Switzerland

Arnold C. Klebs (March 17, 1870 – March 6, 1943) was a physician who specialized in the study of tuberculosis. Born in Berne, Switzerland, Arnold Klebs, the son of renowned bacteriologist Edwin Klebs, was raised in the presence of an extensive array of scientists, artists, and historians.

Klebs took a medical degree from the University of Basel in 1896, then moved to the United States to practice medicine. Klebs worked with William Osler at Johns Hopkins University for a year after arriving in the U.S., and was a contemporary of William H. Welch. Following his work with Osler, he worked as a sanatorium director and tuberculosis specialist in Citronelle, Alabama and Chicago. Given his long experience with the ailment, Klebs was named one of the first directors of the National Tuberculosis Institute.

In 1910, he returned to his native Switzerland, and settled in a villa on Lake Geneva. In 1939, Klebs donated his collection of books to Harvey Cushing for its inclusion in what would become the Yale University's Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library. These included incunabula, plague tracts, herbals, books and pamphlets on tuberculosis, and books on inoculation and vaccination. Klebs' library included 3000 texts related to tuberculosis alone.

References

Arnold Klebs Wikipedia