Simone Mayer (née Bloch) (18 May 1920 - 2006) was a French hematologist and author.[1]
Simone Mayer was born in Metz, Moselle.[2]
Simone and her father were saved from deportation during the Second World War. Father Antoine Girardin, a priest, hid her and her father from the authorities in his presbytery. They were not allowed to leave their room for any reason, nor make noise that could give them away.[3]
After the war, Mayer practiced medicine at "Medical Clinic A" at the Strasbourg Hospital, which was devoted to internal medicine. A photo from 1946 shows she was part of a small female complement at Clinic A (composed mostly of males and Catholic nuns).[4]
Her doctoral thesis was presented to the Faculty of Medicine, Strasbourg in 1951, describing oxysteroids.[2]
She served as chair of the Hematology Department at the Hôpitaux universitaires de Strasbourg, where she was a student of Robert Waitz.[5] Along with Nobel Prize winner Jean Dausset, she helped establish a histocompatibility laboratory at the CRTS Centre Régional de Transfusion Sanguine ("Regional Center for Blood Transfusion"), which led to the development of bone marrow and organ transplantation at University of Strasbourg Hospitals. She was named director of the CRTS Strasbourg in 1976.[6] From 1978 to 1986, Mayer relocated the Plasma Fractionation Center to Lingolsheim.[7]
originally published in HISTOIRE & PATRIMOINE HOSPITALIER, revue de l'Association "Les Amis des Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg", number 21 (magazine of the Association of Friends of the Strasbourg University Hospitals)
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