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October
27, 2006 |
In
memoriam: John Remensnyder, MD
John Remensnyder, MD, a surgeon who served in various leadership roles
at the MGH and Shriners Burns Hospital, died Oct. 14 at the age of 75
after a lengthy illness. Remensnyder held several posts at the MGH, including
chief of the MGH Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, director
of the MGH Operating Rooms and chief of staff at Shriners.
As chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Remensnyder focused a
great deal of attention on the care of disfigured children, particularly
those with severe burns. In the late 1980s, he led two Project HOPE-sponsored
missions to Russia, one to treat nearly two dozen children burned in a
liquefied gas explosion and another to bring back a group of children
who had suffered severe injuries from a devastating earthquake in Armenia.
These visits led him to become a visiting plastic surgeon for a year at
Children's Hospital Number 9, one of the largest hospitals in the Moscow
area.
As director of the MGH Operating Rooms, Remensnyder brought business discipline
to the complicated issue of scheduling. He was interested in all surgical
specialties, grasped the nuances of each field, spoke eloquently about
each and advocated for specific needs.
A native of Plainfield, N.J., Remensnyder graduated from Wesleyan University
and received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School. He was a
surgical resident at the MGH and then went to Johns Hopkins University
for his residency in Plastic Surgery. He was a member of the senior research
staff at the Laboratory of Cardiovascular Physiology at the National Heart
Institute, now the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. He served
as chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the MGH from 1973 to
1982, and became chief of staff at Shriners from 1980 to 1990. In 1991,
he was named director of the Operating Rooms at the MGH, serving in this
role until 1996. He retired in 2001.
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