Hans Schulten

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Hans Joachim Schulten (born July 25, 1899 in Elberfeld , † March 5, 1965 in Cologne ) was a German internist and university professor.

Life

After graduating from high school, Schulten took part in the First World War from 1917 . As a private he was taken prisoner by the English . From 1919 he studied medicine at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen . On October 26, 1919 he became active in the Corps Rhenania Tübingen . In March / April 1920 he fought against the Ruhr uprising . He was reciprocated on May 12, 1920 and fought ten lengths . On May 11, 1921 inactivated , he moved to the University of Kiel and the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen , which it 1924 Dr. med. PhD . With Otto Naegeli at the University of Zurich , Schulten turned to hematology . In 1925 he went to the General Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf . With Hugo Schottmüller he devoted himself to clinical bacteriology . As a senior physician at the 2nd Medical Clinic , he completed his habilitation in 1929. The following year he was appointed private lecturer and in 1935 associate professor .

In November 1933, Schulten signed the German professors' confession of Adolf Hitler . From 1936 he officiated as a medical officer at the Office for Public Health of the NSDAP - Gauleitung Hamburg. In 1937 he joined the NSDAP. He was also a member of the Nazi Medical Association and storm doctor of the SA (until 1938). In the army (Wehrmacht) he was assistant doctor from 1937. R. The University of Rostock appointed him in 1938 as head of the medical polyclinic. At the Second World War, he took off in 1939 as a consulting internist in part, from 1941 in the German-Soviet war . Most recently he was chief medical officer d. R.

In 1943 he was appointed full professor for internal medicine at the University of Cologne . Here he headed the Medical Polyclinic and the Medical Clinic. After the Second World War, he made a special contribution to the reconstruction of the university polyclinic in the remains of the community hospital and the municipal hospitals in Cologne-Merheim . In addition to anemia, Schulen's fields of work were clinical microbiology, infectious diseases and kidney diseases. He published studies on starvation disease and tularemia (rabbit plague). In his last years Schulten was increasingly interested in the psychosomatic aspects of internal illnesses, problems in medical studies and medical status issues. He died in office at the age of 65.

He was married to Margarete Laubenburg († 1956) from Remscheid since 1926 . With her he had three daughters and two sons. His second marriage was with Ilse Wedthoff († 1987).

Honorary positions

  • Dean of the Medical Faculty (1949–1950)
  • Rector of Cologne University (1954/55)
  • Board member of the Rhenish-Westphalian Society for Internal Medicine
  • Board member of the German Society for Internal Medicine
  • Member of the board of the German Hematological Society
  • Board member of the German Society for Traffic Medicine
  • Board member of the German Society for Blood Transfusion
  • Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Board of the German Medical Association (1956)

Honors

Publications (selection)

  • with W. Gaethgens: What does the practical doctor need to know about serology? (= Clinical courses of the Munich medical weekly. Volume 14). Lehmann, Munich 1936
  • Textbook of clinical hematology , 5 editions, 1939–1953
  • Differential diagnosis and treatment of anemia , 1962
  • The doctor , 1960
  • The medical student , 1963

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 129/666.
  2. a b c Gösta Dahmen, Rainer Assmann : Hans Joachim Schulten II, in: Die Tübinger Rhenanen , 5th edition (2002), p. 165.
  3. Dissertation: About neutrophilic leukocytes with changed granules in infectious diseases in childhood .
  4. ^ Entry "Hans Schulten". In: Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium. Retrieved March 3, 2020 .
  5. ^ Rector's speech: The position of medicine within the university
  6. ^ Rüdiger Schünemann-Steffen: Cologne Street Names Lexicon , 3rd exp. Ed., Jörg-Rüshü-Selbstverlag, Cologne 2016/17, p. 327.