Paul Bruce Beeson


Paul Bruce Beeson was an American physician and professor of medicine, specializing in infectious diseases and the pathogenesis of fever.

Biography

After undergraduate study at the University of Washington in Seattle, Paul Beeson studied medicine at McGill University Medical School, where he received his MD in 1933. After two years as an intern at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, he joined his father's and elder brother's practice in Wooster, Ohio. In 1937 he became a research fellow at Manhattan's Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. There he worked for two years in the laboratory of Oswald Avery. In 1939 he relocated to Harvard Medical School's teaching affiliate Peter Brent Brigham Hospital to work under Soma Weiss.
At Atlanta's Emory University School of Medicine Beeson became in 1942 an assistant professor and in 1946 a full professor and chair of medicine. From 1952 to 1965 he was chair of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine.
As successor to Leslie John Witts, Beeson was from 1965 to 1974 the Nuffield Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of Oxford. He gave the Bradshaw Lecture in 1968. When he left Oxford he donated all the money from his Oxford pension for the upkeep of William Osler's old house at 13 Norham Gardens. The house became the warden's lodge of Green College. Beeson persuaded Cecil Howard Green, founder of Texas Instruments, to endow the first one million British pounds to establish the college.
In 1974 Beeson became the VA distinguished professor of medicine at Seattle's University of Washington Medical School, retiring in 1981 as emeritus professor.
Beeson and Petersdorf published a clinical study of patients with persistent fevers of unknown cause – they suggested guidelines for diagnosing the causes.
In 1981 the Yale School of Medicine established the Paul B. Beeson professorship in internal medicine.
From 1950 to 1954 he was editor for Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine. From 1959 to 1982 he was a co-editor for the Cecil-Loeb Textbook of Medicine. He published The Eosinophil in 1977. For The Oxford Companion to Medicine, he was a co-editor with Sir Ronald Bodley Scott and then with Lord Walton after Bodley Scott's death.
William Hollingsworth's Taking Care: The Legacy of Soma Weiss, Eugene Stead and Paul Beeson and Richard Rapport's Physician: The Life of Paul Beeson explain the importance of Beeson's career.
Beeson married in 1942. Upon his death he was survived by his widow, two sons, a daughter, six grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.