World-wide medical news for clinical use. Contributions edited by Dr.A.Franklin MBBS(Lond)Dip.Phys.Med (UK) DPH & DIH(Tor.)LMC(C) FLEx(USA) Fellow Med.Soc.London
28 October 2013
Obituary: Dr.Milton PUZISS developer of ANTHRAX VACCINE.
Date: 26 Oct 2013
Source: Washington Post [edited]
Milton Puziss, a microbiologist who helped develop the 1st human
vaccine against anthrax in the United States, died on 9 Oct 2013 at
the Edenton retirement community in Frederick, Maryland. He was 93.
The cause was congestive heart failure, said his daughter, Marla
Puziss.
Dr. Puziss was working for the Army Department at Fort Detrick, Md.
when he developed an anthrax vaccine in the late 1950s with another
scientist, George Wright. One purpose of the research was to find a
vaccine to use in the case of a biological attack. Earlier anthrax
vaccines had been developed in other countries.
The Wright-Puziss vaccine was tested in clinical trials, and a version
of it is widely used today.
After 17 years with the Army Department, Dr. Puziss joined the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in 1968. He
conducted research on Legionnaire's disease and other bacterial and
fungal diseases. He retired as chief of the NIAID bacteriology and
virology branch in 1986. He was a recipient of the NIH Director's
Award.
Milton Puziss was born in Philadelphia and grew up in Shrub Oak, N.Y.
After Army service in World War II, he graduated in 1948 from Kansas
State University. In 1949, he received a master's degree in
bacteriology and biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin, and in
1956, he received a doctorate in the same disciplines from the
University of Southern California.
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