Kaiser Permanente Hawaii Physicians and Locations Directory for Added

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Kaiser Permanente Hawaii Physicians and Locations Directory for Added YOUR INTRODUCTION TO KAISER PERMANENTE Added Choice® Physicians and Locations Directory Disclaimer The information in this directory is current as of~ August 2021 A provider’s listing in this directory does not guarantee that the provider is still in the network or accepting new patients. Information about a practitioner is provided to us by the practitioner or is obtained as part of the credentialing process. For questions about Added Choice and the provider network, contact our Added Choice Helpline at 1-800-238-5742 or TTY 711. To report an error, please call 1-800-966-5955 or email us at [email protected]. 1 Table of contents Added Choice® Physicians and Locations Directory ......................................................................... 1 Disclaimer ............................................................................................................................. 1 Table of contents................................................................................................................... 2 Get started with these easy steps ......................................................................................... 4 Oahu ..................................................................................................................................... 6 Maui .................................................................................................................................... 65 Hawaii Island ....................................................................................................................... 85 Kauai, Lanai, and Molokai ................................................................................................... 98 Contracted providers by specialty ..................................................................................... 109 After-Hours Care | Oahu ................................................................................................... 131 After-Hours Care | Maui .................................................................................................... 132 After-Hours Care | Hawaii Island ....................................................................................... 133 After-Hours Care | Kauai ................................................................................................... 134 Hearing Aid Providers | By Island ...................................................................................... 135 Pharmacies | By Island...................................................................................................... 137 Optical Centers | By Island ................................................................................................ 140 Hospitals | By Island .......................................................................................................... 152 Contracted Providers | Arranging for your care ................................................................. 154 Contracted Providers By Specialty .................................................................................... 155 Added Choice Pharmacies ................................................................................................ 292 NONDISCRIMINATION NOTICE ...................................................................................... 296 2 HELP IN YOUR LANGUAGE ............................................................................................ 297 For More Information ......................................................................................................... 298 3 Get started with these easy steps Step 1. Choose your doctor Step 2. Making appointments Good health care begins with you building a Two easy ways to schedule your appointments relationship with your personal physician. Your at a Kaiser Permanente facility: doctor is your health care advocate, your direct Visit kp.org/appointments on your computer or link to all Kaiser Permanente facilities, and your use the Kaiser Permanente mobile app and tap source for referrals to specialists. Appointments on the app dashboard. You can Select your personal physician from any of our schedule office or phone visits with your primary available providers. You can change your care physician and same-day adult care visits, and personal physician at any time and for any some specialty appointments. reason. Call your doctor’s office. To choose a Kaiser Permanente provider: Select a medical location where you plan to Preparing for your appointment receive services. Most members select a medical facility that is convenient to home or Check in with your Kaiser Permanente member work. ID card and a valid photo ID. Choose a doctor from one of three primary care If you have additional health insurance in options: addition to Kaiser Permanente, please bring the insurance card with you. Family Medicine cares for members of all ages and specializes in caring for entire families. Bring the names of any medications you are taking, including non-prescription medicines, so Internal Medicine specializes in medical and we can make sure that your prescriptions are preventive care for adults. uninterrupted and your doctor has all the Pediatrics focuses on the specialized needs of information needed to care for you. children from birth to age 21. Tell the doctor about any treatments you are To choose and change your doctor, simply call currently receiving, and feel free to ask your facility or go online at questions. kp.org/chooseyourdoctor. To cancel an appointment, visit kp.org/appointments or call your Kaiser Permanente medical facility. If you’re bringing in a child that is not your own, please get an authorization form from Member Services or have a notarized Health Care Power of Attorney form. For more details on your benefit coverage, please refer to the Added Choice Member Handbook and your Benefit Summary. 4 Step 3. Paying for Kaiser Self-referrals and specialists Permanente services You don’t need a doctor’s referral to make When it’s time for your appointment at a Kaiser appointments for the following services and Permanente facility, be prepared to pay for your departments: services. Your portion may include a copayment, coinsurance, or deductible. Eye examinations for glasses and contact lenses Charges for office visits, labs, X-rays, other Family Medicine tests, procedures, or prescription medication Health Education copayments are due on the same-day that you receive services. Internal Medicine You will be informed in advance if any deposits Mental health and wellness or prepayments are required prior to certain Pediatrics high-cost services or items related to scheduled Physical Therapy procedures. Social Work Pay with cash, personal check, or debit or credit card (Visa®, MasterCard®, Discover®, and Sports Medicine American Express®). NOTE: Precertification may be required for the You may be billed supplemental charges for above services when the care is provided by services performed after you’ve paid and left contracted or non-contracted providers. Consult the clinic. For example, your doctor may need to your Kaiser Permanente Insurance Company send tissue samples or specimens for further Certificate of Insurance for complete details. testing. You’ll need a referral to see a Kaiser You can track costs for services you’ve received Permanente provider for services not listed at a Kaiser Permanente facility at above. Your Kaiser Permanente personal kp.org/outofpocket.1 physician can refer you to a specialist when it’s medically necessary Get a personalized cost estimate at kp.org/costestimates. Before you come in for care at a Kaiser Permanente facility, use this tool to find out what you can expect to pay out-of- pocket for common exams, tests, and services.2 Pay your Kaiser Permanente medical bills at kp.org/paymedicalbills.3 Questions? Call our Patient Financial Services Department at 808-432-5340 (Oahu) or toll free 1-800-598-5928 (neighbor islands). 1 You must be registered on kp.org to use this secure tool. 2 You must be registered on kp.org to use this secure tool. The Estimates tool provides a general idea of what you may pay for a treatment or service, based on your plan benefits. What you actually pay may be higher or lower depending on the care you receive. Your bill will show the actual cost of the service and what you will need to pay. 3 You must be registered on kp.org to use this secure tool. 5 Oahu 6 Behavioral Health Services | Oahu Behavioral Health Services | Oahu 1441 Kapiolani Blvd., Suite 1600 Honolulu, HI 96814 Clinic Hours: Hours may vary by department Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri: 7:30 am - 5:00 pm Sat, Sun: Closed Telephone Numbers: Diagnostic Evaluations 808-432-7600 Appointments/Advice Medical and other clinical services: Diagnostic Evaluations, Individual And Group Therapy, Medication Management, Outpatient Behaviorial Health, Outpatient Chemical Dependency Treatment 7 Behavioral Health Services | Oahu Self-Referral Services Behavioral Health Roman S. Acierto, DO | Specialist | Gender: Male | Medical Education: Western University Health Science College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific | Board Certification: Am Osteo Board of Neurology and Psychiatry | I'm accepting new patients. Wei-Li Hsu, DO | Specialist | Gender: Male | Medical Education: NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine | Board Certification: American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology | I'm accepting new patients. Gina R. Kellner, MD | Specialist | Gender: Female | Medical Education: University of Hawaii - Manoa JABSOM
Recommended publications
  • Kaiser Permanente Hawaii Physicians and Locations Directory (HMO)
    Caring for You Physicians and Locations Directory Information in this directory is accurate as of the 9/10/2021 publication date and may be subject to change without notice. A provider’s listing in the directory does not guarantee that the provider is still in the network or accepting new patients. Information about a practitioner is provided to us by the practitioner or is obtained as part of the credentialing process. If you would like more current information on a practitioner’s license, call either the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs Consumer Resource Center at 808-587-3295 or Kaiser Permanente Member Services toll-free at 1-800-966-5955. To report an error, please call 1-808-966-5955 or email us at: [email protected]. Kaiser Permanente works together with participating providers to ensure all cultural competence obligations are met. We are dedicated to ensuring that services are provided in a culturally competent manner to all members, including those with limited English proficiency and reading skills; as well as those with diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds. To access Kaiser Permanente’s online provider directory, you can visit kp.org/finddoctors. For any questions about the information contained in this directory (hardcopy or online), please call Member Services at 1-800-966-5955, Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., or Saturday, 8 a.m. to noon. TTY users should call 711. 1078 5670 Disclaimer Kaiser Permanente uses the same quality, member experience, or cost-related measures to select practitioners in Marketplace Silver-tier plans as it does for all other Kaiser Foundation Health Plan (KFHP) products and lines of business.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction: the Queen Versus the People 1
    N OTES Introduction: The Queen versus the People 1 . J e a n n e L o u i s e C a m p a n , Memoirs of the Court of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France , ed. M de Lamartine (Philadelphia, PA: Parry and McMillan, 1854), pp. 158–159. 2 . Nancy Nichols Barker, “Revolution and the Royal Consort,” in Proceedings of the Consortium on Revolutionary Europe (1989): 136–143. 3 . Barker, “Revolution and the Royal Consort,” p. 136. 4 . Clarissa Campbell Orr notes in the introduction to a 2004 collection of essays concerning the role of the European queen consort in the Baroque era that “there is little comparative work in English on any facet of European Court life in the period from 1660 to 1800.” See Clarissa Campbell Orr, “Introduction” in Clarissa Campbell Orr (ed.), Queenship in Europe: 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), p. 2. There are strong exceptions to Orr’s conclusion, including the works of Jeroen Duidam and T.C.W. Blanning, which compare the culture, structure, and politics of Early Modern courts revealing both change and continuity but these stud- ies devote little space to the specific role of the queen consort within her family and court. See Jeroen Duindam, Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe’s Dynastic Rivals 1550–1780 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), and T.C.W. Blanning, The Culture of Power and the Power of Culture: Old Regime Europe 1660–1789 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002). 5 . See Kevin Sharpe, The Personal Rule of Charles I (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996); Bernard Bourdin, The Theological-Political Origins of the Modern State: Controversy between James I of England and Cardinal Bellamine (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2010), pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Terrorism at the Outbreak of the First World War
    Wilson 5/13/09 6:36 PM Page 29 The Journal of Conflict Studies Hamlet – With and Without the Prince: Terrorism at the Outbreak of the First World War by Keith Wilson ABSTRACT While the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 helped to set in train a series of reactions by various governments that led to the outbreak of the First World War, the story neither begins nor ends there. From an historian’s perspective, this simple ‘cause and effect’ formula does not do justice to what is a far more complex story. This article assesses that event’s place in histo- ry by situating it within a wider context. It explores how the assassi- nation interacted, first with the Byzantine geopolitics of the Balkans and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and then with the weltanschaung of Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany, to become a catalyst for war. If the events of 1914 tell us anything about the nature of ter- rorism they first illustrate ‘the law of unintended consequences.’ Terrorists are not always able to control the outcome of their actions, which depends on how others react. The Archduke’s assassins did not intend to start a global war by killing him. Unwittingly, they provid- ed the Kaiser with the pretext for a war that he had sought for two years. Second, and flowing from that, it is clear that the significance of terrorist campaigns and actions cannot be understood in isolation from the political contexts in which they occur. Finally, in their desire to strike a blow against a ‘foreign’ authority, one can see that the motives and actions of the Archduke’s attackers were analogous to those of other insurgents before and since.
    [Show full text]
  • Germany Austria-Hungary Russia France Britain Italy Belgium
    Causes of The First World War Europe 1914 Britain Russia Germany Belgium France Austria-Hungary Serbia Italy Turkey What happened? The incident that triggered the start of the war was a young Serb called Gavrilo Princip shooting the Archduke of Austria, Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo. Gavrilo Princip Franz Ferdinand This led to... The Cambria Daily Leader, 29 June 1914 The Carmarthen Journal and South Wales Weekly Adver@ser, 31 July, 1914 How did this incident create a world war? Countries formed partnerships or alliances with other countries to protect them if they were attacked. After Austria Hungary declared war on Serbia others joined in to defend their allies. Gavrilo Princip shoots the Arch- duke of Austria, Franz Ferdinand. Britain and Italy has an France have Austria- agreement with an Hungary Germany agreement defends Germany Russia and with Russia defends declares Austria- Hungary Austria- and join the Serbia war on Hungary war Serbia but refuses to join the war. Timeline - first months of War 28 June 1914 - Gavrilo Princip shoots 28 June, 1914 the Archduke of Austria, Franz Ferdiand and his wife in Sarajevo 28 July 1914 - Austria-Hungary declares war against Serbia. 28 July 1914 - Russia prepares for war against Austria-Hungary to protect Serbia. 4 August, 1914 1 August 1914 - Germany declares war against Russia to support Austria- Hungary. 3 August 1914 - Germany and France declare war against each other. 4 August 1914 - Germany attacks France through Belgium. Britain declares war against Germany to defend Belgium. War Begins - The Schlieffen Plan The Germans had been preparing for war for years and had devised a plan known as the ‘Schlieffen Plan’ to attack France and Russia.
    [Show full text]
  • Wilhelm Ii, Edward Vii, and Anglo-German Relations, 1888-1910
    ROYAL PAINS: WILHELM II, EDWARD VII, AND ANGLO-GERMAN RELATIONS, 1888-1910 A Thesis Presented to The Graduate Faculty of The University of Akron In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts Christopher M. Bartone August, 2012 ROYAL PAINS: WILHELM II, EDWARD VII, AND ANGLO-GERMAN RELATIONS, 1888-1910 Christopher M. Bartone Thesis Approved: Accepted: _______________________________ _______________________________ Advisor Dean of the College Dr. Shelley Baranowski Dr. Chand Midha _______________________________ _______________________________ Faculty Reader Dean of the Graduate School Dr. Stephen Harp Dr. George R. Newkome _______________________________ _______________________________ Department Chair Date Dr. Martin Wainwright ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………………1 II. FAMILY TIES................................................................................................................9 Edward and Queen Victoria……………………………………………………….9 Wilhelm and Queen Victoria…………………………………………………….13 Bertie and Willy………………………………………………………………….17 Relations with Other Heads of State…………………………………………….23 III. PARADIGM SHIFT…………………………………………………………………30 Anglo-German Relations, 1888-1900……………………………………………30 King Edward’s Diplomacy………………………………………………………35 The Russo-Japanese War and Beyond………………………………………….39 IV. CONCLUSION………………………………………………………………………51 BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………………56 iii CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Scholars view the Anglo-German rivalry of the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century,
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 Kaiser Permanente Individuals and Families HSA-Qualified Deductible HMO Reference Guide | Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Of
    WELCOME TO KAISER PERMANENTE Make the most of your membership in 1 3 EASY STEPS 2 2020 Kaiser Permanente Individuals and Families HSA-Qualified 3 Deductible HMO Reference Guide Greetings <Subscriber name>, we’re glad to be your partner on this journey, and we look forward to a long and healthy relationship with you. This reference guide will help you make the most of your membership with Kaiser Permanente. It puts important details at your fingertips, including how to get care, how your plan works, important phone numbers, and information about Urgent Care centers. You will also find information about pharmacies, getting care away from home, and understanding your costs. This reference guide will also walk you through the most important steps for accessing your membership and learning more about how your plan works. The sooner you choose a doctor and sign up on our website, the more you’ll get out of your new health plan. We encourage you to take a few minutes to read through this brochure and keep it nearby for quick reference. Get started today by calling us at 800-777-7902 (TTY 711) or visiting kp.org/newmember. Take advantage of all that life has to offer by being as healthy as you can be. Kim Horn President, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Mid-Atlantic States, Inc. To learn more about the details of your plan, open the fold on the cover. Your plan is governed by the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Mid-Atlantic States, Inc. (KFHP-MAS), Group Agreement and Evidence of Coverage (EOC).
    [Show full text]
  • Terrorism at the Outbreak of the First World War Keith Wilson
    Document generated on 09/23/2021 10:56 a.m. Journal of Conflict Studies Hamlet – With and Without the Prince: Terrorism at the Outbreak of the First World War Keith Wilson Volume 27, Number 2, Winter 2007 Article abstract While the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on 28 June URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/jcs27_2art02 1914 helped to set in train a series of reactions by various governments that led to the outbreak of the First World War, the story neither begins nor ends there. See table of contents From an historian’s perspective, this simple ‘cause and effect’ formula does not do justice to what is a far more complex story. This article assesses that event’s place in history by situating it within a wider context. It explores how the Publisher(s) assassination interacted, first with the Byzantine geopolitics of the Balkans and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and then with the weltanschaung of Kaiser The University of New Brunswick Wilhelm II of Germany, to become a catalyst for war. If the events of 1914 tell us anything about the nature of terrorism they first ISSN illustrate ‘the law of unintended consequences.’ Terrorists are not always able to 1198-8614 (print) control the outcome of their actions, which depends on how others react. The 1715-5673 (digital) Archduke’s assassins did not intend to start a global war by killing him. Unwittingly, they provided the Kaiser with the pretext for a war that he had sought for two years. Second, and flowing from that, it is clear that the Explore this journal significance of terrorist campaigns and actions cannot be understood in isolation from the political contexts in which they occur.
    [Show full text]
  • Pedzisai Maedza (Cape Town) the Kaiser's Concubines: Re-Membering African Women in Eugenics and Genocide1 1 Introduction This Pa
    PhiN-Beiheft 13/2017: 159 Pedzisai Maedza (Cape Town) The Kaiser's Concubines: Re-Membering African Women in Eugenics and Genocide1 This paper investigates the memory of colonial mass violence and atrocities as articulated, pre- served and transmitted through the performance Exhibit B by Brett Bailey. Particular focus is placed on the collusion of racism and colonial sciences towards African women's bodies. It traces the systematic use of sexual violence and the institutionalisation of rape during and in the after- math of the 1904 to 1908 German aggression in present day Namibia. This sexual aggression on prisoners of war and colonial subjects in and outside of concentration camps found expression and was echoed in racist sciences such as eugenics and racial hygiene. People like Eugen Fischer gained recognition and fame for notorious studies on 'racial hygiene', through forced sterilisation experiments on racially mixed people in Namibia and Germany, the majority of whom were born as a result of these institutional rapes. Exhibit B is a performance exhibition that deploys perfor- mance to animate genocide memory and photographs from the colonial ethnographic archive. I use Exhibit B as a case study to investigate how performance enacts this memory to transmit knowledge about the past in response to the 'social amnesia' accompanying unacknowledged gen- ocides. I examine the deployment of performance in animating archival texts to create ephemeral images. In doing so, I explore how the images tell (hi)stories through performance as well as the contemporary political usage and reception of images. I make the case that performance envelops time and creates an alternate historiographic repository for gendered genocide memory.
    [Show full text]
  • The Prince and the Debutante
    The Prince and the Debutante The Prince was Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, or to be exact, His Royal Highness, Louis Ferdinand Victor Edward Albert Michael Hubert, Prince of Prussia (November 9, 1907 – September 26, 1994) and heir to the royal House of Hohenzollern. The headline in the New Orleans States, dated December 28, 1933, proclaimed, “GERMAN PRINCE KIDNAPED [sic] BY DEBUTANTE”. Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia At the time, the prince was the 26-year-old would-be emperor of Germany if his family were ever to go back to the throne, in other words, the pretender to the abolished German Empire. He was the grandson of Kaiser Wilhelm II of World War I fame, who was the grandson of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. The article announced that the “imperial German prince” was kidnapped the previous day by Miss Anne Dickinson Robertson, a New Orleans debutante that year – “and did he love it!” Anne Dickinson Robertson All the while, “New Orleans matrons” and “society lionesses kept the telephone at the royal suite of The Roosevelt ringing with calls for „Mr. Hohenzollern‟ that kept a secretary busy.” Miss Robertson conquered the prince “with one smile” and completely disrupted “a society schedule” by making off with the young prince in a “shining new car they both borrowed from V.F. Cooper, New Orleans automobile executive” and headed for “a cocktail party at Mrs. Lillian Lewis‟.” Numerous debs were “trying their best to corner him at the Lewis cocktail party for Claudia Pipes and Elizabeth Eustis, but he had already set his eyes on pretty Anne Robertson,” reported the States on December 29, 1933.
    [Show full text]
  • From This Land to No-Man's-Land - War Like We Have Never Seen, Nor Will Ever See Again!
    From This Land to No-Man's-Land - War Like We Have Never Seen, Nor Will Ever See Again! by Bill Betten Co-Director of the California WW1 Cwntennial Task Force In 1914, across America, folks could choose to marvel at all that was right about the world. And when other nations like Germany struggled to provide resources for its ravenous and antiquated military nobility, the U.S. instead found abundance. Even the ancient symbol “cornucopia” had come to represent the lavishness of the newly legislated American holiday “Thanksgiving.” • But, not all was right with the world. For the U.S., the Japanese peril loomed too close to the California coastline for Easterners and threatened shipping. • Though the west had mostly been won, just to the south of the border Mexico wrangled with reoccurring revolution that regularly leaned more than heavy on the border states. • And, clearly obvious to France and England, the German Kaiser even bragged about his worldwide spy network. © 2018 Bill Betten Young Wilhelm II Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck Practically raised by the powerful Prussian General Baron Otto Von Bismarck, the child Wilhelm, under Bismarck’s influence, had grown to distain his parent’s trust of foreign powers, and fondness of all things British. He also grew to distrust his English and Russian relatives. Since in fact, the German Kaiser, the Russian Czar, and the King of England all had the same grandmother, Queen Victoria. Wilhelm II and his grandmother Queen Victoria of England © 2018 Bill Betten The forefathers of the related royals had hoped that family ties were strong enough to bind wealth and avoid war.
    [Show full text]
  • Monarchical State-Building Through State Destruction : Hohenzollern Self-Legitimization at the Expense of Deposed Dynasties in the Kaiserreich
    This is a repository copy of Monarchical state-building through state destruction : Hohenzollern Self-legitimization at the Expense of Deposed Dynasties in the Kaiserreich. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/125755/ Version: Accepted Version Article: Heinzen, Jasper Maximilian orcid.org/0000-0002-6790-3787 (2017) Monarchical state- building through state destruction : Hohenzollern Self-legitimization at the Expense of Deposed Dynasties in the Kaiserreich. German History. pp. 525-550. ISSN 0266-3554 https://doi.org/10.1093/gerhis/ghx103 Reuse Items deposited in White Rose Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the White Rose Research Online record for the item. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ Monarchical State-building through State Destruction: Hohenzollern Self-legitimization at the Expense of Deposed Dynasties in the Kaiserreich* Dr Jasper Heinzen, Department of History, University of York Abstract The German War of 1866 was a turning point in the consolidation of Prussian hegemony over the emerging German nation-state. This article engages with a neglected aspect of this process by investigating the destabilizing effect of Prussia’s territorial expansion at the expense of fellow monarchies in Hanover, Hessen-Kassel, Nassau and Schleswig-Holstein.
    [Show full text]
  • How Cancer Caused World War I and Its Aftermath
    How Cancer Caused World War I and Its Aftermath Lawrence I. Bonchek, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.A.C.S. Editor in Chief Author’s Note: A version of this article was originally published six years ago. At the time it attracted considerable comment from physicians who were unfamiliar with the medical issues that influenced European history at the turn of the last century. It was especially favorably received by our non-physician readers, probably because it discussed a medical topic in terms they could easily understand. In the ensuing years, as the Journal’s distribution list has expanded, we have not only added large numbers of physicians to our medical staff, but also a considerable number of readers who are not physicians. As a result, we thought it would be worth- while to publish a modified version of the original article. That the intervening years have also been characterized by America’s involvement in almost perpetual war, adds a particu- lar if tangential relevance to this article. World War I had origins so complex that historians still argue about them. To the best of my knowledge, however, only one of those discussions (see reference #2) has directly considered the influence of cancer. “The lamps are going out all over Europe; had no immediate impact, its eventual revelation was We shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.” the stimulus for a subsequent river of articles and - Sir Edward Grey, countless speculations by American historians. British Foreign Secretary, 1905-1916 Contrast this flood of ink with the story of Kaiser Frederick III of Germany (1831-1888).
    [Show full text]