Michael Reese Hospital

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Michael Reese Hospital is an American hospital founded in 1881. It is one of the oldest hospitals in Chicago.

Louis Katz, the Medical Research Institute's first full-time investigator and former president of the American Heart Association, was one of the first to explore the relation of coronary heart disease to cholesterol concentration in the blood. Cardiovascular Institute researchers Dr. Alfred Pick and Dr. Richard Langendorf, perfected the use of the electrocardiograph.

Leonidas Berry was a pioneer in the development and use of the gastroscope. Dr. Samuel Soskin and Dr. Rachmiel Levine made important discoveries about the "gatekeeper" action in insulin, which is of fundamental importance to the understanding of diabetes. Dr. Albert Milzer and his research team were the first to kill the polio virus and make an effective vaccine against this debilitating virus.

The Internal Medicine Residency program currently consists of 66 residents and interns. The hospital announced in early 2008 that the training programs will close at the end of the 2007-2008 academic year. The hospital has recently faced financial challenges. On 6/5/08, channel 7 news reported that the hospital filed with the state a letter of intent to close by the end of 2008.

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