Background
Maurice Farnandis Rabb was born on August 7, 1932 in Shelbyville, Kentucky.
Maurice Farnandis Rabb was born on August 7, 1932 in Shelbyville, Kentucky.
He graduated from the University of Louisville School of Medicine in 1958. He attended Kings County Hospital for postgraduate training.
He is widely known for his pioneering work in cornea and retinal vascular diseases. He was interested in traveling and taking pictures in his early ages. At 14, Rabb was thinking about a career in photography which led him to the field of ophthalmology.
After attending Indiana University in Bloomington for two years, Rabb transferred to the University of Louisville in 1951 when this institution was desegregated.
He studied ophthalmology at New York University and became the first African-American resident of the University of Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary. When he completed his residency, Rabb started a private practice in downtown Chicago which focused on retinal disease.
Rabb became the medical director of the Illinois Eye Bank and Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois. He was also the director of the fluorescein angiography Laboratory at the Michael Reese Hospital.
In 1977, he was a full professor of clinical ophthalmology.
He served as the chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology at Mercy Hospital, president of the Medical Hospital Mercy Staff, and medical director of Prevent Blindness America. They have two sons, Maurice III (1967) and Christopher (1970). Rabb founded the Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center at the University of Illinois (The University of Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary) with a colleague, after obtaining a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
The center was the only one in the country to diagnose and treat sickle cell eye disease.
Rabb also led a research that helped prevent retinal detachment and blindness in sickle cell patients. Rabb was recognized for his efforts to expand opportunities for doctors from underrepresented communities through the National Medical Association.
Rabb, a non-smoker, died on June 6, 2005 after a long battle with non-small cell lung cancer for which he was diagnosed in the winter of 2003.
He and another member of the boy scouts represented their region at the Boy Scout World Jamboree in Paris. Rabb also was a member of the Roman Barnes Society of the American Academy of Ophthalmology.