Robert Kistner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert William Kistner (August 23, 1917 -- February 6, 1990), was a well-known gynecologist who specialized in the treatment of endometriosis and was involved in the early development of the birth control pill.
Kistner was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Alfred and Gertrude Kistner, and graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1938 and from its Medical School in 1942. He served in the Pacific as a flight surgeon during World War II. Following residency in Cincinnati, Baltimore, and New York he moved to Boston in 1952 and became a professor at Harvard Medical School, where he was early an advocate of the birth control pill. He was also a senior attending physician at Brigham & Women's Hospital in Boston.
Kistner was the author of numerous books and articles, most notably The Pill: Fact and Fallacy, published in 1969, which has subsequently been translated into six languages, and Principles and Practices of Gynecology, which has been republished numerous times and is still a major textbook used in medical schools.
Kistner was married twice, first to Georgia Golde, in 1943, and secondly to Janet Langhart, in 1978. He had four children with his first wife, Dana, Robert, Jr., Stephen, and Peter. In 1986 he retired and moved to West Palm Beach, Florida. He committed suicide at his home there at the age of 72.
[edit] References
New York Times, Feb. 10, 1990, Robert W. Kistner, 72, Gynecologist, Is Dead
Boston Globe, Feb. 9, 1990
Gale, Thomson, Contemporary Authors (Biography), January 1, 2004