Willy Georg Stoll

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Willy G. Stoll

Willy Georg Stoll (born April 21, 1932 in Zurich ) is a Swiss doctor of gynecology . He is an emeritus professor of medicine and was the chief physician of the gynecological clinic of the Aarau Cantonal Hospital (KSA) and president of the hospital management.

Career

He attended schools in Zurich and initially studied architecture and then medicine at the University of Zurich . His dissertation (1962) dealt with tumors of the third cerebral ventricle . From 1966 to 1971 he published the results of his scientific investigations in specialist journals for anesthesiology and obstetrics and gynecology . He completed his clinical training in anesthesia at the University Hospital Zurich , in surgery at the Samedan District Hospital and in gynecology again at the University Hospital Zurich. Stoll completed his training with a study visit to Berlin . He was a pioneer of microblood testing in children during childbirth. In 1973 he was elected chief physician at the gynecological clinic at Aarau Cantonal Hospital, where he worked for almost 24 years. In 1974 he completed his habilitation at the University of Zurich in the field of obstetrics and gynecology. He had academic teaching and examination obligations at the Universities of Zurich and Basel. From 1978 to 1985 he was President of the Hospital Management of the Aarau Cantonal Hospital.

He is married and has two daughters.

Act

He shaped the KSA women's clinic and turned it into a training hospital. He paid special attention to the interface problems between the various professional groups in a large central hospital, in particular the interaction between midwives and doctors. "People who think that obstetrics can be provided by the doctors alone or by the midwives because giving birth is ultimately something extremely natural understand little about nature and childbirth." So that the doctor and the clinic can achieve a high level of performance in obstetrics and gynecology For Stoll, devotion (agape) to those in need of help for medical activity was also part of the ability. He was open to the desires, wishes and needs of expectant mothers, including when setting up the delivery rooms. He also offered fathers to stay in the operating room when they had caesarean sections. He took the time to talk to the patients and treated their decisions with respect. The advances in diagnostics and at the operating table gave him satisfaction because of the successes that benefited the patients. He made a significant contribution to the promotion and improvement of new methods and techniques through publications, conference contributions, university and other advanced training events, seminars, lectures and academic teaching commitments.

He is also active as a medical and military historian and holds the Certificate of Advanced Studies in Applied History from the University of Zurich.

Fonts (selection)

all four appeared in: Obstetrics - Obstetrics Editor Prof. Dr. med. Hans Günter Hillemanns, Springer Verlag 1995, ISBN 978-3-642-48049-2 (print) ISBN 978-3-642-48048-5 (online)
  • From the village midwife to the women's clinic. - The beginnings of clinical gynecology and the development of the Aarau women's clinic. here + now, Publishing House for Culture and History, Baden 2010, ISBN 978-3-03919-166-6 .
  • The first Swiss medical mission to the Eastern Front - limits of neutrality. In annual journal No. 34 of the Society for Military History Study Trips (GMS)
  • The traitor Ernst S. was shot 70 years ago. In Schweizer Soldat, 87th year, November 2012

Individual evidence

  1. Archive link ( Memento from October 2, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  2. [1]
  3. Bettina Talamona: "Births still mean a lot to me" - On my farewell to Prof. Willy Stoll as chief physician at the women's clinic. Article in the Aargauer Zeitung
  4. Quotations from “Mission statement of the birthing department - Aarau Cantonal Hospital”; Brief presentation by Willy Stoll, head physician at the women's clinic. Discussion of the mission statement in the Zofinger Tagblatt of March 30, 1997: Implementing the birth philosophy and defined human image in everyday life
  5. [2]