[Skip to Navigation]
Sign In
Article
November 1975

The Time in Which We Dwell

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Surgery, New England Medical Center Hospital and Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston.

Arch Surg. 1975;110(11):1273-1279. doi:10.1001/archsurg.1975.01360170013001
Abstract

There is a wonderful saying—attributed to the Quakers, I believe—that one should not speak unless he can improve on silence. With this self-admonition, I should like to discuss three topics: (1) the international aspects of cardiovascular surgery and of our Society in particular; (2) the North American Chapter, its resources and its responsibilities; and (3) our possible role, as cardiovascular specialists, for modifying the impending federal domination of health care services in the United States.

The International Scene  Because newcomers to any discipline usually give insufficient credit to the past and because we Americans tend to be less well informed about others than others may be about us, let me present a small sample of the debt we all owe to past and present international pioneers. My apologies for many obvious omissions.Arteriography, as you know, was largely a European development beginning with cerebral visualization by Moniz1 in 1927,

Add or change institution
×