Background
Holt, Luther Emmett was born on March 4, 1855 in Webster, New York, United States. Son of Horace and Sabrah (Curtice) Holt.
medical writer university professor
Holt, Luther Emmett was born on March 4, 1855 in Webster, New York, United States. Son of Horace and Sabrah (Curtice) Holt.
Bachelor of Arts University of Rochester, 1875, Master of Arts, 1878. Doctor of Medicine College of Physicians and Surgeons (Columbia University), 1880. (Doctor of Laws, Rochester, 1902.
Doctor of Science, Columbia University, 1904, Brown University, 1914).
He went to medical school in the University at Buffalo and then the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, earning his Doctor of Medicine in 1880. He pioneered the science of pediatrics, and became the head physician at New York"s Babies Hospital in 1888. Under his leadership it became the leading pediatric hospital of its time.
Using a grant he acquired through his connection with the Rockefeller Institute Holt surveyed the quality of milk in the tenement districts and subsequently proved that a large proportion of infant fatalities were due to excessively high bacterial counts.
He was instrumental in the creation of milk commissions and advisory boards for the city"s Department of Health. Throughout his lifetime, Doctor Holt became a leader in the field of pediatrics.
In 1891 he was appointed to the board of the Rockefeller Institute, under whose auspices he would eventually travel to China. Following his development of a child welfare program adopted at the Red Cross Cannes Conference (1919), he was elected president of the Child Health Organization.
As president of the American Association for the Study and Prevention of Infant Mortality (AASPIM), Holt promoted reproduction control by society as a means of eugenics.
In his 1913 presidential address he said:
We must eliminate the unfit by birth not by death. The race is to be most effectively improved by preventing marriage and reproduction by the unfit, among whom we would class the diseased, the degenerate, the defective, and the criminal. He wrote The Care and Feeding of Children to great acclaim, and the text quickly became a bestseller.
He also wrote Diseases of Infancy and Childhood in 1896.
The book would go through 11 editions and remain the definitive text on pediatrics until 1940. In 1967, Holt, Junior., renewed the copyright.
In 1980, Appleton/Classics of Medicine Library published a facsimile of the 1897 first edition Holt was a professor at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1901 to 1922.
In 1923, despite his old age, the Rockefeller Institute called on him to lecture at Peking Union Medical College for their winter term.
Holt accepted, viewing the offer as both an opportunity to observe Chinese children for his own studies, and introduce pediatrics to the Chinese doctors. Days before his return home, Holt suffered a heart attack and died in Peking on January 14, 1924.
He was a charter member of the American Pediatric Society and would be elected its president twice, an honor bestowed upon only one other doctor.
Married Linda Mairs, April.