Johannes Dietl

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Johannes Dietl (born July 21, 1948 in Schönthal / Upper Palatinate ) is a German gynecologist and obstetrician .

Live and act

Childhood and youth

Dietl experienced his childhood in Schönthal / Upper Palatinate . His parents ran a farm there.

He went to primary school in Schönthal and then switched to the Augustinian monastery school in Weiden . At the age of 14 he left the monastery school without a school leaving certificate and first attended the agricultural vocational school in Waldmünchen . In 1963 he moved to the Badische Anilin- und Soda-Fabrik (BASF) in Ludwigshafen am Rhein as an unskilled worker and in 1964 began training as a chemical worker and chemical laboratory technician . He was looked after by the Christian Youth Village Association in Germany (CJD) Neustadt / Weinstrasse .

After his military service (Gneisenau-Kaserne Koblenz ) he worked at BASF in the measurement and testing laboratory and began a distance learning course at the Akademikergesellschaft (AKAD) Stuttgart to prepare for the external high school diploma , where he spent the last year on weekend classes at the AKAD- Frankfurt School participated. At the High State School (HOLA) in Hanau , he passed the final exam for non-school students .

Studies and clinical-scientific training

Dietl studied human medicine from 1972 to 1978 in Freiburg im Breisgau and Heidelberg . He was a scholarship holder of the Friedrich Ebert Foundation . After completing his doctorate at the Anatomical Institute of the University of Freiburg , he continued his training as a specialist in gynecology and obstetrics at the University Women's Clinic in Kiel .

On September 12, 1980, he assisted Kurt Semm with the world's first laparoscopic appendectomy as private assistant . In addition to his clinical training in the women's clinic, Dietl received special training in gynecopathology at the Pathological Institute of the University of Kiel .

After completing his habilitation , Dietl went to the University of Tübingen 's women's clinic as a senior physician in 1986 . Research stays took him to Baylor College of Medicine and to the MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston / Texas, as well as to the Nuffield Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Oxford .

Together with the company Hewlett-Packard ( Böblingen ), Dietl developed a cardiotocograph (HPm1350A) that records the simultaneous registration of child movements (Kineto-CTG) and can also be used with pregnant twins . In 1996 he was appointed to the chair for gynecology and obstetrics at the University of Würzburg , succeeding Karl Heinrich Wulf . In 2014 he retired.

Johannes Dietl dealt scientifically with the structure and function of the egg shell (zona pellucida) , the immunology of the fetomaternal border zone and the pathogenesis of ovarian carcinoma .

In addition to his clinical-scientific work, Dietl was always interested in historical questions. So he worked on the dark chapter of the role of the University Women's Clinic in Würzburg in the Third Reich.

From 2005 to 2011 Dietl was chairman of the Ordinarienkonvent of the university women's clinics in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. For many years he was on the board of the Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research at the University of Würzburg. He is a member of the International Society of Gynecological Pathologists .

Prices

Selected publications

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Prof. Johannes Dietl as a former visiting. Christian Youth Village Association of Germany V., December 1, 2013, accessed December 24, 2013 .
  2. a b c d e Ralph Hübner (greeting): Who is who in the Federal Republic of Germany . 7th edition. Who is Who, Verlag für Personenenzyklopädien AG, Zug 2000, ISBN 3-7290-0030-6 , p. 652-653 .
  3. K. Semm (ed.): Chronicle of Kiel University Women's Clinic and Michaelis Midwifery School 1805–1995. A medical-historical study for the 190th anniversary. Self-published, Kiel 1995, ISBN 3-922500-57-9 , p. 62.
  4. Curriculum Vitae short form. (PDF) Deutsches Grünes Kreuz eV, accessed on December 30, 2013 .
  5. ^ Hewlett-Packard demonstration video on YouTube
  6. In pajamas in the delivery room. In: Main-Post. April 25, 2014, accessed May 9, 2014 .
  7. J. Dietl (ed.): Medicine without morals. In: 200 years of the gynecological clinic and midwifery school in Würzburg. Vogel-Verlag, Würzburg 2005, ISBN 3-00-017157-6 , pp. 91-97.
  8. Almost 1,000 women were forcibly sterilized. In: Main-Post. October 24, 2014, accessed December 28, 2014 .
  9. People as research "material". In: Main-Post. August 3, 2017. Retrieved December 25, 2017 .