2003
DOI: 10.1001/archneur.60.10.1475
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Bernard Brouwer's Lecture Tours in the United States (1926 and 1933)

Abstract: Bernard Brouwer (1881-1949), the first ordinary professor of neurology in the Netherlands and a man of prominent stature among continental neurologists, was invited to read lectures at several university clinics in the United States in 1926 and 1933. In this article, we describe Brouwer's impressions from these tours to obtain a view of US neurology in the 1920s and 1930s compared with the state of Dutch neurology. We studied Brouwer's reports of the lecture tours and pertinent materials obtained from several … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…He recognized professional neurosurgery could only be reached by training surgeons specifically in neurosurgery. Following a lecture tour in the USA (1926), he sent Ignaz Oljenick (1888–1981), a resident surgeon, to the USA to train with Cushing [53, 57]. In 1929, Oljenick returned to Amsterdam and started neurosurgery on Brouwer’s department.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He recognized professional neurosurgery could only be reached by training surgeons specifically in neurosurgery. Following a lecture tour in the USA (1926), he sent Ignaz Oljenick (1888–1981), a resident surgeon, to the USA to train with Cushing [53, 57]. In 1929, Oljenick returned to Amsterdam and started neurosurgery on Brouwer’s department.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Before Brouwer's appointment the disciplines of neurology and psychiatry had always been of one department in The Netherlands, following the German tradition of "brainpsychiatry" (Koehler, Bruyn, & Moffie, 1998). Brouwer gained international fame and, in 1926, during one of his American lecture tours, he was invited to fill the new chair of experimental neurology at Johns Hopkins University (Koehler & Bruyn, 2003). He refused the offer and instead started a new university clinic for neurology at the Amsterdam Wilhelmina Gasthuis (the former Buitengasthuis) in 1929.…”
Section: Joseph Prick: Biographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The clinical neurologist and neuroanatomist Bernard Brouwer was the first ordinary professor of neurology in the Netherlands, becoming Superintendent of the Neurological Institute in Amsterdam (Koehler and Bruyn, 2003). He lectured in the US for two months in 1926 and again in 1933, when he stayed at Yale for 8 days and met with Fulton, Dusser de Barenne, Yerkes, and Kennard.…”
Section: The Yale Years (1931–1943)mentioning
confidence: 99%