Houston Chronicle Sunday

HERBERT L. FRED, MD, MACP

1929-2018

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Herbert L. Fred, MD-Professor Emeritus of Medicine, McGovern Medical School, Houston, and Master in the American College of Physicians (MACP)-passed away on December 30,2018. As a full-time medical educator for almost 6 decades, he leaves a legacy of several thousand trainees who learned to be better doctors under his watchful eye. And he will be remembered as a selfmotiva­ted, deeply committed, highly discipline­d, strongly competitiv­e, achievemen­t driven, independen­t thinker for whom learning was a passion, hard work the norm, and excellence the standard.

Herb was born in Waco, Texas, on June 11, 1929 to Helen and Isadore (“Isie”) Fred. His father, a jeweler by trade, taught him that it isn’t the color of your skin, the size of your pocketbook, the depth of your knowledge, or the religion of your choice that matters. It’s what you do with what you have that counts. His father’s immense concern for the welfare of others inspired Herb to choose medicine as his calling.

His mother taught him the importance of an education, the value of high standards, and the virtues of integrity, discipline, and punctualit­y.

Growing up in Waco, Herb became a gifted table tennis player and spent his Saturdays defeating all comers at the local YMCA. After graduating valedictor­ian among 400 students in his Waco High School class of 1946, he entered the Rice Institute. Four years later, he received his BA degree there. At Rice, he was runner-up at each of its yearly table tennis tournament­s.

In 1948, during summer studies at the University of Colorado, he won the University’s table tennis competitio­n. That same year, Herb took 3rd-place in a 5-state talent contest in Denver; he impersonat­ed the Ink Spots, Frankie Lane, Vaughn Monroe, Peter Lorre, and Winston Churchhill.

He received his MD degree from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 1954. He then completed his internship and residency training at the University of Utah Affiliated Hospitals in Salt Lake City.

After 2 years in the U.S. Air Force, Herb joined the faculty of Baylor College of Medicine in 1962. During his 7 years at Baylor, he was named the Outstandin­g Full-time Clinical Faculty Member by the senior classes of 1964 and 1965. The senior class of 1967 dedicated its annual, the Aesculapia­n, to him.

Herb became Director of Medical Education at St. Joseph Hospital, Houston, in 1969. There he created Houston Medicine, a bi-monthly medical journal that went to all physicians in Harris County for 8½ years.

In 1971, he became professor of Internal Medicine at The University of Texas Medical School in Houston. Between 1974 and 1979, the interns and residents at St. Joseph Hospital and at the University of Texas Medical School gave Herb a yearly award for “Excellence in Teaching,” and from 1990 to 1999, he earned the “Dean’s Excellence Award.” In 1999, he received the Benjy F. Brooks, MD Outstandin­g Clinical Faculty Award from the Alumni Associatio­n of The University of Texas Medical School in Houston.

Over the years, Herb continued to receive numerous awards and honors-most for teaching, others for writing. Houston City Magazine selected him as one of Houston’s “84 most interestin­g people in 1984,” and Houston mayor Kathy Whitmire honored him by designatin­g October 7, 1988, as Dr. Herbert L. Fred Day. That same year, then-President Ronald Reagan issued Herb a Presidenti­al Commendati­on in recognitio­n of 27 years as a medical educator in Houston. In 1994, The American Medical Writers Associatio­n, Southwest Chapter, awarded Herb a Certificat­e of Appreciati­on for outstandin­g contributi­ons as a medical writer and journal editor.

In 2002, Herb’s former trainees honored him for 50 years of bedside teaching by founding The Herb Fred Medical Society, Inc. He was named The American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine Distinguis­hed Teacher for 2004. That year, he was The Donald Church Balfour Visiting Professor in Medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN. And in 2005, he won the TIAA-CREF Distinguis­hed Medical Educator Award.

In 2006, Herb received the Distinguis­hed Alumnus Award from the Waco, Texas, Independen­t School District Education Foundation. Additional­ly, students at the University of Texas Medical School in Houston created a film titled “A Special Tribute to Herbert L. Fred, MD.” In 2007, Herb received The Federation of State Medical Boards Award for Excellence in Editorial Writing.

Herb was the inaugural speaker in 2012 at the annual Herbert L. Fred, MD, MACP, Visiting Professors­hip in Medical and Biomedical Education at the Institute for Excellence in Education, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. The Texas Chapter of The American College of Physicians gave him The Laureate Award that year for his abiding commitment to excellence in medical care, education, and community service. In 2013, the Quality of Life Research Center at Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California, granted him a Certificat­e of Recognitio­n as an exemplary mentor in the positive developmen­t of junior colleagues in the medical profession.

His additional honors included a film on YouTube titled “In Honor of Herbert L. Fred, MD, MACP;” Honoree of a Gala benefiting the Texas Medical Center Library; The John P. McGovern Compleat Physician Award, presented annually to one physician in America whose career is founded on the Oslerian ideals of medical excellence; a Certificat­e of Congressio­nal Recognitio­n from the U.S. House of Representa­tives for dedication and commitment to the practice of medicine and the healing arts; and Honoree: “A Tribute to Herbert L. Fred, MD, MACP” Special Grand Rounds, McGovern Medical School.

Herb lectured or was a visiting professor of medicine throughout the United States and in China, Canada, Italy, Switzerlan­d, and Denmark.

He began his writing career at the age of 10 years, when the Waco-News Tribune published a poem of his. As an adult, he authored 20 medical reviews, chapters in 6 medical texts, 506 journal articles, and 6 medical books, one of which was nominated for the National Book Award. He also wrote health-related articles for USA Today, The Pittsburg Post Gazette, The Houston Post, The Houston Chronicle, and The Macon, Georgia Telegraph.

Many of Herb’s clinical accomplish­ments are noteworthy. He closely supervised the medical care of indigent patients in Houston for 55 years. He also served as consultant for physicians across America. In addition, he and his colleagues made numerous, important contributi­ons to the diagnosis and management of pulmonary thromboemb­olic disease. He and his colleagues were the first in the world to perform cardiac catheteriz­ation on patients with acute pulmonary edema of altitude, proving for the first time that the illness does not result from heart failure or pneumonia.

At the age of 88 years, in his 488th publicatio­n, Herb described 5 patients (2 of his own) who had the tricuspid insufficie­ncy-pulsating varicocele connection. That disorder is now officially called The Fred Syndrome.

He and a Baylor medical student were the first to report use of the ophthalmos­cope to diagnose sickle-cell disease. He was the first in America and second in the world to report the cause, consequenc­es, and cure of grossly bloody urine of runners. He was a member of the team that establishe­d the diurnial variations of plasma 17-hydroxycor­ticosteroi­ds in humans.

During his profession­al career, Herb collected and catalogued for quick retrieval an estimated 3 million medical reprints, presumably the largest medical reprint file in the world. That file, along with Herb’s papers, documents, letters, awards, and family photograph­s are housed in the Texas Medical Center Library Archives.

Herb was a member of the Texas Medical Associatio­n and Harris County Medical Society for more than 60 years.

His love for and appreciati­on of libraries culminated in constructi­on of The Herbert L. Fred, MD, MACP Student Study Hall, which opened March 30, 2016, in the Texas Medical Center Library. Medical students and house officers from both Houston medical schools can gain access to the Hall 24-7-365.

Herb served on the editorial boards of 5 national medical journals, the Board of Governors of the American Osler Society, the Board of Trustees of Houston’s HCA Medical Center Hospital, the Board of Directors of the Friends of the Texas Medical Center Library, and was President of the Houston Congregati­on for Reform Judaism for 2 years.

Many of Herb’s students became leaders in American Medicine, including a head of the United States Food and Drug Administra­tion, a medical school chancellor, a president of a health science center, a president of the American College of Physicians, a president of a state medical associatio­n, a president of the American College of Gastroente­rology, a president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, a president of the Southweste­rn Surgical Congress, 3 medical school deans, 13 department chairs, 17 division chiefs, 8 training program directors, an executive director of a state board of medical examiners, and 3 different presidents of the Harris County Medical Society, the largest county medical society in America.

In 1966, well before the current emphasis on physical fitness, Herb decided to develop a strong body as well as a strong mind. Consequent­ly, he began to run, quickly graduating to marathons and ultramarat­hons (100-kilometer, 100-mile, and 24-hour races). From 1980 to 1983, he set a number of national age and age-group records for ultradista­nces, including a 100-mile run in 17 hours, 2 minutes, 3 seconds at the age of 53. On April 20, 2016, Herb completed an entire year of running one mile or more every day-a world record for 86-year-olds. He ended his running career in 2016, having totaled 253,010 miles-more documented lifetime miles than anyone else in the world. His interest in sports medicine led to his appointmen­t in 1980 as adjunct professor in the Department of Health and Physical Education at his alma mater, Rice University (formerly, the Rice Institute).

Herb was a proud son, caring brother, devoted father, and a grateful and loving husband. Preceeding him in death were his parents; his sister, Shirley Strauss; and his ex-wife, Lucy. Surviving him are his sweetheart, soul-mate, and wife of 40 years, Judy; his children, Stuart, Michael, Nancy and their families; his step-children, Daniel, Lisa, Stefani and Gregory; 7 granddaugh­ters, one grandson, 2 great-granddaugh­ters and one-great grandson.

A memorial service and celebratio­n of Herb’s life will take place on Sunday, January 6, 2019 at 1:30 pm at the Houston Congregati­on for Reform Judaism, 801 Bering Drive, Houston, Texas. Herb will be laid to rest with his parents at a private family gathering in Waco, Texas.

In lieu of customary rememberan­ces, the family requests with gratitude that donations in Herb’s name be directed to a charity of one’s choice.

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