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Dr Paul Hoeffel Garvey

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Dr Paul Hoeffel Garvey

Birth
Death
Jan 1983 (aged 85)
Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA
Burial
Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Dr. Gerald Norton Hoeffel (Sylvester's son) to Mrs. Hall:

In your city of Rochester is Dr. Paul Hoeffel Garvey associated with the University as professor of Neurology. He is the son of Louise Hoeffel Garvey, a first cousin of my father.

University of Michigan Annual Register 1928-1929
NEUROLOGY:

John Louis Garvey, M.D., Assistant Professor
Paul Hoeffel Garvey, M.D., Instructor


LIFE OF THE CLINICIAN
by Michael J. Lepore

Chapter 5. To Each His Farthest Star: A Medical Student at Rochester, 1929 - 1934

Page 67

...Neurology was one of our best-taught subjects, the professor being a red-haired young man, Dr. Paul Garvey, who had a knack of instilling the fundamentals of solid clinical neurology into each of our minds. He published very little, but he knew clinical neurology and was a superb clinical teacher. Walking through the ward one day, a patient, in for some other complaints, made a flip remark about Dr. Garvey's red hair, and Garvey took one look at him and said, "He probably had a frontal-lobe tumor," which he did, to the utter consternation of those in charge of that patient. We emerged from the junior year as competent students...


The University of Rochester
The School of Medicine and Dentistry
Gold Medal Award for Excellence in Teaching - Recipients

1956 Lawrence A. Kohn, R`27
1957 Paul H. Garvey


The University of Rochester
The School of Medicine and Dentistry

The Paul H. Garvey Lectureship. This visiting lectureship was established in 1981 by the Departments of Neurology and Medicine in honor of Dr. Paul H. Garvey. Distinguished speakers in the field of neurology emphasizing its ties to internal medicine are selected for this honor.


Dept. of Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry, 1967

The Dept. of Neurology was established in 1966. Previously neurology had been part of the Dept. of Medicine. This 1967 departmental group photograph includes seven members, five of whom have been identified. Front row (left to right): Paul Garvey, Robert J. Joynt (chair), Richard Satran. Back row (left to right): David Marsh, David Goldblatt, two unidentified persons.



This is the paper which introduces Pantopaque to the US medical establishment.

IODINATED ORGANIC COMPOUNDS AS CONTRAST MEDIA FOR RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSES


Dept of Radiology, School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Rochester. Rochester, N.Y.


Presented before the Radiological Society of North America at the 28th Annual Meeting in Chicago ILL. Nov 30 - Dec 4 1942 and submitted for publication June 1944.


"With the assurance from these experimental studies that the new medium was safe it was first tested clinically on Nov 23, 1940, by Drs Paul Garvey and Nathaniel Jones in Case I reported below [in article] the absence of untoward developments led to its use in 4 additional patients."


University of Rochester
The Hourglass
Class of 1954

1950-54

• Parties in the medical school gym.
• Paul Garvey doing the skater's waltz at the annual party.


Rochester Academy of Medicine

Interviewee: Dr. Nolan Kaltreider, Professor Emeritus of Medicine

Interviewer: Dr. Pricilla Cummings


Date: May, 1979


...Dr. Garvey came from Michigan, as you well know as neurologist. Now, following that time, during throughout Dr. McCann's complete tenure as Chairman, no other faculty members were brought in from the outside. They all came from the so-called farm system, that is through the residency program. And I think it is of interest to name some of these people on his faculty during the '30s and the '40s. I think it was a rather superb faculty. Now, first of all there was Sam Bassett, and Henry Keutmann. Pat (Stavin), Ralph Jacox, Larry Young, Scott (Swisher). (Zan Tru), Bill Valentine. Arthur (Bauman), Chris Waterhouse, Jack Jaenike, Frank Lovejoy, Paul Yu and probably many others. And I really think this is a very excellent faculty. Also included is a fellow by the name of Kaltreider.


...Paul Garvey and I had the house staff at our house for an all-out party, to celebrate. And a little later Gordon (Khuri/Curry) joined us. and a little after that Bill (Coleman/Kohlman). We always had a fair amount of liquid refreshments and lots of food, because Dr. Garvey always insisted that as long as you ate you could not get in any trouble with alcohol. These parties all ran about, along the same line, and invariably about the middle of the party, Dr. Garvey would turn up his cuffs, pull up his coat collar, push his hair down over the front of his head, and we would then sing the Skater's Waltz and Paul, somebody would dust the ice, and Paul would gracefully glide across the ice, performing the figure-eight. A little bit later he would come out with his umbrella and do his so-called tightrope walk. All very amusing.


Archives of Ophthalmology
Vol. 11 No. 6, June 1934
Ophthalmologic Review

ANEURYSMS OF THE CIRCLE OF WILLIS

PAUL H. GARVEY, M.D.


Arch Ophthal. 1934;11(6):1032-1054.


Author Affiliations

ROCHESTER, N. Y.

From the Department of Medicine, the School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Rochester and the Medical Clinic of the Strong Memorial and Rochester Municipal Hospitals.



J Clin Invest. 1934 May; 13(3): 383–397.

doi: 10.1172/JCI100592. PMCID: PMC436000


Copyright notice

THE MEASUREMENT OF THE ELASTICITY AND VISCOSITY OF SKELETAL MUSCLE IN NORMAL AND PATHOLOGICAL CASES; A STUDY OF SOCALLED "MUSCLE TONUS"

Wallace O. Fenn and Paul H. Garvey

Department of Physiology, of the School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York

Department of Medicine, of the School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York



Annals of Internal Medicine

1 May 1933 Volume 6 Issue 11


The Effect of Liver Therapy on the Neurologic Aspects of Pernicious Anemia


PAUL H. GARVEY, PAUL M. LEVIN, and ERASTUS I. GULLER
Dr. Gerald Norton Hoeffel (Sylvester's son) to Mrs. Hall:

In your city of Rochester is Dr. Paul Hoeffel Garvey associated with the University as professor of Neurology. He is the son of Louise Hoeffel Garvey, a first cousin of my father.

University of Michigan Annual Register 1928-1929
NEUROLOGY:

John Louis Garvey, M.D., Assistant Professor
Paul Hoeffel Garvey, M.D., Instructor


LIFE OF THE CLINICIAN
by Michael J. Lepore

Chapter 5. To Each His Farthest Star: A Medical Student at Rochester, 1929 - 1934

Page 67

...Neurology was one of our best-taught subjects, the professor being a red-haired young man, Dr. Paul Garvey, who had a knack of instilling the fundamentals of solid clinical neurology into each of our minds. He published very little, but he knew clinical neurology and was a superb clinical teacher. Walking through the ward one day, a patient, in for some other complaints, made a flip remark about Dr. Garvey's red hair, and Garvey took one look at him and said, "He probably had a frontal-lobe tumor," which he did, to the utter consternation of those in charge of that patient. We emerged from the junior year as competent students...


The University of Rochester
The School of Medicine and Dentistry
Gold Medal Award for Excellence in Teaching - Recipients

1956 Lawrence A. Kohn, R`27
1957 Paul H. Garvey


The University of Rochester
The School of Medicine and Dentistry

The Paul H. Garvey Lectureship. This visiting lectureship was established in 1981 by the Departments of Neurology and Medicine in honor of Dr. Paul H. Garvey. Distinguished speakers in the field of neurology emphasizing its ties to internal medicine are selected for this honor.


Dept. of Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry, 1967

The Dept. of Neurology was established in 1966. Previously neurology had been part of the Dept. of Medicine. This 1967 departmental group photograph includes seven members, five of whom have been identified. Front row (left to right): Paul Garvey, Robert J. Joynt (chair), Richard Satran. Back row (left to right): David Marsh, David Goldblatt, two unidentified persons.



This is the paper which introduces Pantopaque to the US medical establishment.

IODINATED ORGANIC COMPOUNDS AS CONTRAST MEDIA FOR RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSES


Dept of Radiology, School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Rochester. Rochester, N.Y.


Presented before the Radiological Society of North America at the 28th Annual Meeting in Chicago ILL. Nov 30 - Dec 4 1942 and submitted for publication June 1944.


"With the assurance from these experimental studies that the new medium was safe it was first tested clinically on Nov 23, 1940, by Drs Paul Garvey and Nathaniel Jones in Case I reported below [in article] the absence of untoward developments led to its use in 4 additional patients."


University of Rochester
The Hourglass
Class of 1954

1950-54

• Parties in the medical school gym.
• Paul Garvey doing the skater's waltz at the annual party.


Rochester Academy of Medicine

Interviewee: Dr. Nolan Kaltreider, Professor Emeritus of Medicine

Interviewer: Dr. Pricilla Cummings


Date: May, 1979


...Dr. Garvey came from Michigan, as you well know as neurologist. Now, following that time, during throughout Dr. McCann's complete tenure as Chairman, no other faculty members were brought in from the outside. They all came from the so-called farm system, that is through the residency program. And I think it is of interest to name some of these people on his faculty during the '30s and the '40s. I think it was a rather superb faculty. Now, first of all there was Sam Bassett, and Henry Keutmann. Pat (Stavin), Ralph Jacox, Larry Young, Scott (Swisher). (Zan Tru), Bill Valentine. Arthur (Bauman), Chris Waterhouse, Jack Jaenike, Frank Lovejoy, Paul Yu and probably many others. And I really think this is a very excellent faculty. Also included is a fellow by the name of Kaltreider.


...Paul Garvey and I had the house staff at our house for an all-out party, to celebrate. And a little later Gordon (Khuri/Curry) joined us. and a little after that Bill (Coleman/Kohlman). We always had a fair amount of liquid refreshments and lots of food, because Dr. Garvey always insisted that as long as you ate you could not get in any trouble with alcohol. These parties all ran about, along the same line, and invariably about the middle of the party, Dr. Garvey would turn up his cuffs, pull up his coat collar, push his hair down over the front of his head, and we would then sing the Skater's Waltz and Paul, somebody would dust the ice, and Paul would gracefully glide across the ice, performing the figure-eight. A little bit later he would come out with his umbrella and do his so-called tightrope walk. All very amusing.


Archives of Ophthalmology
Vol. 11 No. 6, June 1934
Ophthalmologic Review

ANEURYSMS OF THE CIRCLE OF WILLIS

PAUL H. GARVEY, M.D.


Arch Ophthal. 1934;11(6):1032-1054.


Author Affiliations

ROCHESTER, N. Y.

From the Department of Medicine, the School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Rochester and the Medical Clinic of the Strong Memorial and Rochester Municipal Hospitals.



J Clin Invest. 1934 May; 13(3): 383–397.

doi: 10.1172/JCI100592. PMCID: PMC436000


Copyright notice

THE MEASUREMENT OF THE ELASTICITY AND VISCOSITY OF SKELETAL MUSCLE IN NORMAL AND PATHOLOGICAL CASES; A STUDY OF SOCALLED "MUSCLE TONUS"

Wallace O. Fenn and Paul H. Garvey

Department of Physiology, of the School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York

Department of Medicine, of the School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York



Annals of Internal Medicine

1 May 1933 Volume 6 Issue 11


The Effect of Liver Therapy on the Neurologic Aspects of Pernicious Anemia


PAUL H. GARVEY, PAUL M. LEVIN, and ERASTUS I. GULLER


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