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At
the invitation of William Halsted, chief of Surgery at Johns
Hopkins, William S. Baer organized the first Orthopaedic Outpatient
Clinic in 1900. Dr. Baer had received his undergraduate and medical
degrees from The Johns Hopkins University and was an intern and
resident in General Surgery at Johns Hopkins. The clinic was
located in the space now occupied by the Emergency Medicine Department.
Dr. Baer developed a hip joint arthroplasty using an interposition
membrane of pig's bladder. He also developed new procedures for
low back pain and the treatment of osteomyelitis. He graduated
his first resident, Lewis C. Spencer, from the Department of
Orthopaedic Surgery in 1915. Until his death in 1931, he graduated
one resident annually, many of whom became leaders in American
orthopaedics.
One of Dr. Baer's partners in private practice, George E. Bennett,
was appointed orthopeaedic surgeon in charge in 1931. Orthopaedic
Surgery had just begun to organize, unite, standardize training
and certify specialists when Dr. Bennett took this position.
By 1937, one-sixth of the 150 surgeons certified as orthopaedists
by the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery had completed their
residencies at Johns Hopkins. Dr. Bennett retired in 1947.
A third partner of Drs. Baer and Bennett, R. W. Johnson, Jr.
became the next program chairman. Among his many significant
contributions was the organization of the Journal of Bone and
Joint Surgery. Robert A. Robinson was appointed the first full-time
professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Hopkins in 1953. Under Dr.
Robinson's tutelage, the residency program expanded to include
additional residents, a research component and rotations through
affiliated hospitals. In 1973, with reorganization of the Department
of Surgery into a section of surgical sciences, orthopaedics
achieved greater organizational and financial independence with
elevation to departmental status.
Lee H. Riley, Jr., was appointed director of the Department in
1979 when Dr. Robinson became professor emeritus. Under Dr. Riley,
the program expanded to graduate five residents annually, a new
Orthopaedic Center was opened in 1982, a rotation to the Maryland
Institute for Emergency Medical Services was initiated to increase
the residents' experience with polytrauma, a spine service was
added to the Department, and the residency program was approved
for an additional year of training.
In April 1991, Richard Stauffer joined the Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery as the orthopaedic surgeon in chief. Dr. Stauffer's status
as an internationally known orthopaedic surgeon enhanced the
department and its involvement with the rest of the Johns Hopkins
Medical Institutions. Dr. Stauffer expanded the already outstanding
faculty and staff with the addition of world-renowned physicians
and researchers.
In January 1998, Dr. Richard Stauffer passed away after a complicated
illness. In the interim, we were fortunate to have the leadership
of Dr. John P. Kostuik, Professor of Spinal Surgery. In October
2000, concluding a nationwide search, Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine officials named Frank J. Frassica, M.D., chairman
of the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery.
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