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Walter C Alvarez

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Nationality
  
American

Years active
  
1913-1925

Name
  
Walter Alvarez

Parents
  
Luis F. Alvarez

Children
  
Luis Walter Alvarez

Occupation
  
physician

Relatives
  
Mabel Alvarez

Role
  
Physician

Education
  
Stanford University

Full Name
  
Walter Clement Alvarez

Born
  
July 22, 1884 (
1884-07-22
)
San Francisco

Alma mater
  
Cooper Medical College (now Stanford University)

Spouse(s)
  
Harriet Skidmore Smythe (m. 1907; died 1973)

Died
  
June 18, 1978, California, United States

Books
  
Nerves in collision, Walter C. Alvarez, Alvarez on Alvarez

Grandchildren
  
Walter Alvarez, Donald Alvarez, Jean Alvarez, Helen Alvarez

Walter Clement Alvarez (July 22, 1884 – June 18, 1978) was an American physician of Spanish descent. He authored several dozen books on medicine, and wrote introductions and forewords for many others.

He was born in San Francisco and spent his childhood in Hawaii, where his father was a government physician. In 1910, having received his medical education in Stanford University, he began his practice.

From 1913 to the end of 1925, Alvarez practiced internal medicine in San Francisco and conducted research at the University of California, Berkeley. He lived at 3837 Clay Street raising his family. In 1934 he became Professor of Medicine at the University of Minnesota (Mayo Foundation) and later served as Consultant in Medicine Emeritus.

His father was Luis F. Alvarez, who worked as a physician in California and Hawaii and developed a method for the better diagnosis of macular leprosy. His sister was California artist and oil painter Mabel Alvarez.

Alvarez was married to the former Harriet Skidmore Smythe and the couple had four children: Gladys, Luis, Robert and Bernice. Luis later became a Nobel Prize-winning physicist.

His grandson is Walter Alvarez, a Professor of Geology at the University of California, Berkeley.

Beginning after his retirement in 1951, Alvarez began writing a medical column which soon became syndicated throughout North America in hundreds of daily and weekly newspapers. The Walter C. Alvarez Memorial Award is named in his honor and is presented to a member or nonmember of the American Medical Writers Association to honor excellence in communicating health care developments and concepts to the public.

Alvarez' syndrome, a syndrome of hysterical or neurotic abdominal bloating without any excess of gas in the digestive tract, and Alvarez-waves, painless uterine contractions occurring during the length of pregnancy, are named after him.

Alvarez was the first to investigate electric activity of a stomach and, thereby, became the founder of a new diagnostic gastroenterology branch — electrogastrography.

He died in California in 1978.

His personal papers are held by Lane's Archives and Special Collections.

References

Walter C. Alvarez Wikipedia