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Joseph Asbury Bell (1904-1968)

Cite as: Joseph Asbury Bell (1904-1968).The James Lind Library (www.jameslindlibrary.org).

Joseph Asbury Bell (1904-1968)A year after Joseph Bell’s death, the American Journal of Epidemiology celebrated his contributions by publishing a memorial issue (1969;Vol 90, No.6). The editorial introduction concludes as follows: “We honor Joe Bell for his uncompromising scientific integrity, his productivity as an epidemiologist, his ability to stimulate and guide collaborative research, and for those qualities which made him such a good friend and mentor to many epidemiologists”.

The chronology of Bell’s life below has been prepared by Iain Chalmers using autobiographical details in the thesis Bell submitted for his doctorate in public health (Bell 1948), and from a biographical appreciation authored by a former colleague (Leake 1969).

1904

Born Trinidad, Colorado, USA

1921

Graduated Manual Training High School, Denver, Colorado

1921-23

University of Colorado, Boulder

1923-29

University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver

1929

Graduated MD

1929-30

Rotating internship, US Marine Hospital, San Francisco

1930

Commissioned Assistant Surgeon, US Public Health Service

1931-32

Maritime Quarantine and Medical Examination of Aliens, US Quarantine Station, Angel Island, California

1932-33

Hospital practice of internal medicine, US Marine Hospital

1933

Commissioned Passed Assistant Surgeon, US Public Health Service

1933-34

Medical officer in charge of US Quarantine Station and Second Class Relief Station, and Medical Inspection of Aliens for Port of San Diego and Mexican Border

1935

3-month course at the National Institute of Health

1935-36

Assistant Chief of Foreign Quarantine and Immigration Division (Chief: Assistant Surgeon General FA Carmelia), US Public Health Service, Washington, DC; Acting Director, Pan American Sanitary Bureau (Director: Surgeon General Hugh S Cumming)

1936-37

Postgraduate study at Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health

1937

Graduated Master of Public Health

1938-39

Instructor in Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health

1937-43

Epidemiology Section (Chief: Dr JP Leake), Division of Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

1942

Commissioned Surgeon, US Public Health Service

1943

Commissioned Senior Surgeon, US Public Health Service
Four month course at University of Virginia in Military Government (under General Wickersham), then Allied Military Government School at Tizi Ouzou, near Algiers
Military Director for Health for the provinces of Enna and Caltanissetta, Sicily

1943-44

Epidemiologist, Allied Control Commission, US Typhus Commission, Naples, and at Supreme Allied Headquarters, London. Designed and conducted a school for training Allied Military Government officers for public health operations in Europe

1945

Chief, Public Health, US Group, Central Council for Germany
Awarded Legion of Merit by the US Army

1945-48

Chief, Epidemiology Section, Division of Infectious Diseases, National Microbiological Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

1947

Course in the Army School of Atomic Medicine

1947-48

Candidate for degree Doctor of Public Health from Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health

1948

Graduated Doctor of Public Health

1949

Commissioned Medical Director, US Public Health Service; certified Diplomate by the American Board of Preventive Medicine

1950

Member, WHO Expert Committee on Communicable Disease in Children

1951

Chair, US delegation, International Sanitary Regulations for Control of Communicable Diseases

1952

Elected President, American Epidemiological Society

1953

Asked to direct an evaluation of the efficacy and safety of the Salk polio vaccine, but resigned after criticism of his proposal for a study with adequate blind controls

1962

Awarded Distinguished Service Medal of US Public Health Service

1964

Compulsorily retired for physical disability after repeated myocardial infarcts, and receiving a graft for abdominal aortic aneurysm

1968

Died suddenly at home, while supervising the installation of heating and air conditioning improvements

Among Joseph Bell’s continuing responsibilities up to his death, were:

From 1950

Member of the subcommittee on the Control of Communicable Diseases of the American Public Health Association; lecturer on preventive medicine and research at various schools of hygiene and public health (Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University, University of Pittsburgh, and the US Army and Navy).

From 1953

Associate member, Commission on Influenza, Armed Forces Epidemiological Board; member, WHO Expert Advisory Panel on International Quarantine

From 1957

Member, Medical Advisory Board, Welfare Department, District of Columbia

From 1960

Member, Governing Council, American Public Health Association

From 1962

Consultant to the University of Colorado on the design and conduct of studies on the health effects of long term low grade exposure to uranium

From 1964

Chief consultant in epidemiology, Department of Health, Montgomery County, Maryland

Sources

Bell JA (1948). Autobiography. In: The epidemiological principles and procedures involved in a study of the prophylactic value of an alum-precipitated mixture of diphtheria toxoid and pertussis vaccine. Thesis submitted to the Johns Hopkins University in conformity with the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Public Health, pp 81-82.

Leake JP (1969). Joseph Asbury Bell, 1904-1968: a biographical appreciation. American Journal of Epidemiology 90:464-470.

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