Education
His younger brother, Henry Z. Goldstein specializing in otolaryngology, also a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania completed the brothers" careers in medicine.
His younger brother, Henry Z. Goldstein specializing in otolaryngology, also a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania completed the brothers" careers in medicine.
Goldstein died in Paris in 1963. During the late 1920s, Goldstein undertook postgraduate studies in Vienna, Austria, and the Rotunda Hospital in Dublin. He co-authored, "Clinical Endocrinology of the Female" with Charles Mazer, published in Philadelphia and London by West.B. Saunders Company, 1932.
He also was the author of over forty articles in his specialty published in respective medical journals during his career, and was a proponent of the use of the Colposcopy in physical examinations of female patients.