Samuel Hellman
Samuel Hellman is the A. N. Pritzker Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of The University of Chicago. His major career positions included 15 years as a Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School, where he was the first chairperson of that newly-formed department. He left to become the Physician-in-Chief of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, following which he became the Dean of the Pritzker School of Medicine at The University of Chicago and...See more
Samuel Hellman is the A. N. Pritzker Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of The University of Chicago. His major career positions included 15 years as a Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School, where he was the first chairperson of that newly-formed department. He left to become the Physician-in-Chief of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, following which he became the Dean of the Pritzker School of Medicine at The University of Chicago and concomitantly the Dean of the Biological Sciences Division of the university. After his tenure as Dean, he remained as a senior member of the medical school faculty. He has co-edited with Vincent DeVita and Steven Rosenberg the leading textbook of oncology, Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology, through its first seven editions. It was by far the most successful of its kind, a number of the English editions sold in excess of 40,000 copies, and some editions were also translated into Spanish, Chinese, or Italian. With DeVita and Rosenberg, he edited four editions of the textbook, AIDS, and with others he co-edited five sequential textbooks concerning breast cancer. He was an early proponent and remains an advocate of breast-preserving treatment as the preferred treatment of small breast cancers. He has written two books intended for the general public as well as for a medical audience: Learning While Caring in 2017 and Repairing and Perfecting the World in 2021. Being a physician-scientist and teacher gives him a participant's window on the evolution of academic medicine. Being a radiation oncologist gives him a window on the benefits and challenges of the atomic age. Being a breast cancer doctor gives him a window into the patient's role in her care. Being a man in the second half of the twentieth century and first half of the twenty-first century with a sister and a wife, and being the father of a law professor daughter and the grandfather of 3 granddaughters, makes gender equality a central concern to him. See less
Samuel Hellman's Featured Books