Arthur Arnold Osman

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Arthur Arnold Osman (24th May 1893 - 20th April 1972) was a British nephrologist. Osman was one of the first physicians to specialize entirely in the management of renal disorders; the first to recognize that nephrology needed to become a specialty (1930s); published profusely; the first physician to style himself a ‘nephrologist’ (1945); founded the first nephrological society in the world, the Renal Association (1950); and organized the first international meeting devoted entirely to the kidney and its diseases (1953)[1]

Dr. Osman graduated Whitgift School and completed medical studies at Guy’s Hospital in 1919. Osman was married to Rose Osman in 1936. Osman had a son Philip and an adopted daughter, two grandchildren, and many other living relatives.

He began his career at Guy's Hospital in London but during WWII, bombing drove him to Pembury Hospital, Pembury, Kent, where he continued to work as director of the renal unit until retirement in 1957. Today the Renal Unit is dedicated to him.

His death in 1972 was a result of heart failure at his home in East Sussex.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://ndt.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/12/7/1526.pdf Nephrol Dial Transplant (1997) 12: 1526–1530