Eduard Gilliar

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eduard Gilliar (born November 12, 1924 in Ottobeuren ; † March 24, 2012 ) was a German physician. He was a specialist in internal medicine and for many years head physician at the Nabburg hospital.

Career

Gilliar came from the Allgäu. After the end of the Second World War, he began studying human medicine at the University of Munich , which he completed in 1950 with a doctorate and state examination. At first he worked as an assistant doctor at the Munich Klinikum rechts der Isar . His wife Irmentraud, who was born in Nabburg, made him aware of the advertisement for a position as chief physician at the newly built district hospital in Nabburg , which he took up on July 2, 1959. The hospital remained professional for 30 years, as chief physician for internal medicine, and in the last ten years also as medical director. Shortly before his retirement in 1989, he campaigned for the renovation of the house. From January 1, 1990, he ran a private practice for internal medicine in Nabburg.

He volunteered to represent the doctors. As spokesman for the chief physicians of the district hospitals concerned, he accompanied the process of territorial reform in 1972, which broke up four districts in the Schwandorf district . From 1972 to 1978 he was city councilor in Nabburg and from 1992 chairman of the medical district association Schwandorf. Together with his colleague Horst Guggenmos, he regularly organized advanced training events for the medical profession in his district.

He was a delegate to the German Medical Association and the Bavarian Medical Association . In 2005, at the German Medical Congress, he suggested that the electronic health card should be expanded to include the option of a declaration of intent to donate organs on a voluntary basis and a reference to an existing living will. Both motions were accepted with a large majority.

Honors

Fonts

  • Regarding two modifications of Weltmann's coagulation tape with special regard to 1. Simplification of the methodology and adaptation to practical requirements, 2. Extension of the group diagnostic value of the method. - Munich, Med. Fac., Diss. V. February 26, 1951

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Who's who in medicine - Who's Who-Book & Pub., 1978
  2. Dear doctor and good advisor , In: Der Neue Tag, March 27, 2012
  3. Ernst von Bergmann plaque for Dr. Eduard Gilliar (PDF; 67 kB) , In: Bayerisches Ärzteblatt 7–8 / 2006, p. 377
  4. 108th German Medical Association (PDF; 43 kB), In: Deutsches Ärzteblatt 102 (2005), issue 19
  5. 11th meeting of the district council of the district of Schwandorf with awarding of district merit medals