David B. Levine is an orthopaedic surgeon, hospital administrator, professor and historian of medicine who has held positions since 1961 at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, New York.
From 1957 to 1958, he worked as a Rotating Intern at the Case Western Reserve's Metropolitan General Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio. From 1958 to 1959 he was an Assistant Surgical Resident at Beth Israel Hospital (now known as Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) in Boston, Massachusetts, and also during this year was an instructor in surgery at Harvard Medical School.
From 1959 to 1961, he served at the rank of lieutenant in the U.S. Navy as the medical officer aboard the USS Forrestal in the Sixth Fleet.
From 1966 to 1995, Levine was on the attending staff at Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS), as an orthopaedic surgeon. He held the titles of Chief of the Scoliosis Service (1968–1995), and Director of the Department of Orthopedic Surgery (1987–1990). As Chairman of the Orthopedic Residency Training Program (1987–1990), he streamlined the application process, helping to introduce one of the first computerized scoring processes and adding a psychologist interview session.
He taught for over thirty years at Cornell University Medical College, and from 1978 to 1995 held the title of Professor of Clinical Orthopaedic Surgery at the Weill Cornell Medical College. From 1979 to 1982, Dr. Levine was an Alumni Council Trustee of the college.
During his career, Levine published over 65 peer reviewed articles, 16 books and chapters and gave more than 300 invited presentations. He was the proposer of the Scoliosis Research Society in 1964, a founding member and its president from 1978 to 1979, serving on the board of directors for fifteen years. In 2010, the Society, now a highly recognized international organization, presented him with its "Lifetime Achievement Award."[3]
In 2006, the hospital announced the creation of The David B. Levine Endowed Clinical Research Chair.[4]
Historian of medicine and early immunotherapy research
In 1995, Levine retired from active patient care and the next year moved to Florence, Italy with his wife Janet, an artist, where he lectured at Careggi University Orthopaedic Hospital, studied antique furniture restoration and perfected his Italian cooking. He returned to New York in 1997, purchased a farm in Columbia County, New York, restored a 19th-century home, tended an organic garden, boarded black Angus cattle, cared for a raft of ducks, and a herd of homeless sheep and goats.
In 2003 Levine became the Director of the Alumni Association at Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS). In concert with the 150th anniversary of HSS he published the definitive history of the hospital in 2013 titled, Anatomy of a Hospital. History of the Hospital for Special Surgery, 1863–2013.[5]
Levine has pursued history of medicine, and given presentations on medicine during the Civil War.[6] From the beginning of the Civil War in April 1861, until the Confederate States surrendered in April 1865, the casualties and deaths on both sides were monumental, changing the face of medical care, resulting in the creation of the Army Medical Corps.[7]
Levine has spoken about the history of cancer immunotherapy research at Hospital for Special Surgery.[8] Dr. William Coley (January 12, 1862 – April 16, 1936), (the 3rd surgeon-in-chief at the hospital when it was called The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled) who developed Coley's Toxins, investigated the field.[9]
Selected writings
Levine DB (2013). Anatomy of a Hospital. Hospital for Special Surgery 1863–2013. New York, NY: Print Matters, Inc. ISBN0979668522, ISBN978-0979668524.
Anand N, Levine DB, Burke S, Bansal M. Neuropathic spinal atrophy in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. J Bone Joint Surg. 1997; 79-A:1235–39.
Dhuper S, Ehlers KH, Fatica NS, Myridakis DJ, Klein AA, Friedman DM, Levine DB. Incidence and risk factors for mitral valve prolapse in severe adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Pediatr Cardiol. 1997 Nov-Dec; 18(6):425 – 28. PMID9326688
Cole BJ, Flics S, Levine DB. Optimizing hospital reimbursement through physician awareness: A step toward better patient care. Orthopedics. Jan 1998; 21(1): 79 – 83. PMID9474635
Wilson PD Jr., Levine DB. Hospital for Special Surgery. A brief review of its development and current position. Clin Orthop. 2000 May; (374):90-105. PMID10818970
Levine DB. Hospital for Special Surgery. First site 1863–1870. Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled. J HSS 2005 Sep; 1(1): 3–8. PMID18751802
Levine DB. The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled: Knight to Gibney, 1870–1887. J HSS 2006 Feb; 2(1):1-6. PMID18751838
Levine DB. Gibney as surgeon-in-chief: The earlier years, 1887–1900. J HSS 2006 Sep; 2(2):95-101.
Levine DB . The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled, Entering the twentieth century, ca. 1900 to 1912. J HSS 2007 Feb 3(1):2-12.
Levine DB. The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled moves east on 42nd Street 1912 to 1925. J HSS 2007 Sep; 3(2):131-136.
Levine DB. The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled: William Bradley Coley, third surgeon-in-chief 1925–1933. J HSS 2007 Feb; 4(1):1-9.
Levine DB. The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled, Eugene H. Pool, fourth surgeon-in-chief 1933–1935, followed by Philip D. Wilson, fifth surgeon-in-chief 1935. J HSS 2008 Mar; 4(1):97-106.
Levine DB. The Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled renamed The Hospital for Special Surgery 1940; the war years 1941–1945. PMC2642546 J HSS 2009 Feb]; 5(1): 1–8.
Levine DB. The Hospital for Special Surgery affiliates with Cornell University Medical College and New York Hospital, 1951; Philip D. Wilson retires as surgeon-in-chief, 1955. J HSS 2009 Sep; 5(2): 83–91.
Levine DB. The Hospital for Special Surgery 1955 to 1972: T. Campbell Thompson serves as sixth surgeon-in-chief 1955–1963 followed by Robert Lee Patterson, Jr. the seventh surgeon-in-chief 1963–1972. J HSS 2010; 6: 1–13.
Levine DB. The Hospital for Special Surgery 1972–1989; Philip D. Wilson, Jr., eighth surgeon-in-chief. J HSS 2010 Sep; 6(2): 119–133.
Levine, DB. Origin & Early Years of the Scoliosis Research Society 1966–1979. Spine Deform 2015 Sep; 3(5): 392–401.
^Davis, Rebecca (December 28, 2015 ). "Training The Immune System To Fight Cancer Has 19th-Century Roots," Morning Edition, Nat'l Public Radio. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
^Pallardy, Carrie, "On Tracing the History of Hospital for Special Surgery: Q&A With Dr. David B. Levine of HSS," Becker's Spine Review, August 1, 2013 ("The third surgeon-in-chief, William Bradley Coley (1925 to 1933) was trained as a general surgeon and leaves a legacy in the field of cancer for his world renowned use of Coley's Toxins. Coley is known as the Father of Cancer Immunotherapy, a field today considered to be the future of cancer treatment.")