Background
He was born in Clafeld, Germany on February 22, 1901.
radiologist university professor
He was born in Clafeld, Germany on February 22, 1901.
In 1933, Nazi leadership declared that no one of Jewish background could hold a position in German governmental facilities. As a result, Schatzki was forced to leave his University Hospital position. They were the first Schatzkis to leave Germany, although other family members would join them in America in the years leading up to the war as conditions in Germany deteriorated further.
After arriving in the United States, George Schatzki came into the world.
He trained in radiology in Berlin with Hans Heinrich Berg (1889-1968) who was the leading diagnostic radiologist in Germany at that time. He immigrated to the United States of America in 1933 and worked as a radiologist physician in Boston at Massachusetts General Hospital Home until 1943 where he had a profound effect on the trainees in the radiology department as well as on young internists in the department of medicine.
He subsequently took a position as chief of radiology at Mount Auburn Hospital where he established a diagnostic radiology residency training program and was largely responsible for changing Mount Auburn from "minimally sophisticated community hospital into one of the teaching hospitals associated with Harvard Medical School.". He served as President of the New England Roentgen Ray Society, of which he became an honorary member in 1967.
In the 1950s, Schatzki first characterized a type of pathological stricture of the lower esophagus, which is now known as a Schatzki ring.