Isaac Michaelson

Isaac Claude Michaelson (Hebrew: יצחק קלוד מייכלסון, 1903–1982), was an Israeli ophthalmologist and member of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.

Biography

Michaelson was born in 1903 in Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom. He studied ophthalmology at the University of Glasgow and the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1927.

The development of the retina was the basis of much of his research and of many of his publications.[1] Michaelson worked as a pathologist in an eye disease hospital in Glasgow and served as a lecturer at the University of Glasgow.

During World War II, he was an advisor to the British Army on ophthalmology and served in Egypt.

In 1948, he completed his doctorate and emigrated with his family to Israel. He was initially an advisor to the Israel Defense Forces and worked as an eye surgeon.

In 1949, Michaelson was named director of department of ophthalmology at Rambam Hospital, Haifa and, in 1954, became director of the department of ophthalmology at Hadassah University Hospital in Jerusalem, which subsequently became, under his management, the Ophthalmology Research Center. He was also appointed as a professor at the medical school of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Much of Michaelson's work was to assist developing countries, particularly in Africa, and in 1971 he initiated the International Conference on the Prevention of Blindness. After his retirement from Hadassah Hospital in 1973, he acted in blind rehabilitation.

He established the Jerusalem Institute for the Prevention of Blindness.

Awards

gollark: Under what country's legal code is it a crime?
gollark: Will the crime or the bisection occur at the specified time?
gollark: Besides, what if I go to Mars? WHAT THEN?! Who will bisect me?
gollark: It's unhelpful to tell someone they'll be bisected and not specify when or how usefully.
gollark: And what do you mean "bisected by a crime"?

References

  1. British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1984 January; 68(1): 1
  2. "Israel Prize recipients in 1960 (in Hebrew)". cms.education.gov.il (Israel Prize official website). Archived from the original on March 4, 2010.

See also

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