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American physician and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Steven Lehrer is a physician and writer, known for medical research and for his English translation of Else Ury.
Steven Lehrer | |
---|---|
Born | Los Angeles |
Occupation(s) | Physician, writer, translator |
Known for | Medical research |
Spouse | Pamela Dunn (married 1971) |
Lehrer was born in Los Angeles. He attended UCLA and graduated from Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
After training and specialty board certification, Lehrer worked as a radiologist, radiation oncologist, and nuclear medicine physician.
Lehrer has published on the topics of breast cancer and the estrogen receptor, prostate cancer, puberty and pregnancy.[1] He published two medical textbooks, Understanding Lung Sounds and Understanding Pediatric Heart Sounds.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
Lehrer published the first English translation of the most popular book of German children's writer Else Ury, Nesthäkchen and the World War.[11][12][13] He has published plays, a novel,[14] books on German history,[15] the Holocaust,[16] and the history of medicine.[17][18][19][20][21] He edited a collection of the stories of Frank Buck[22] and published English translations of Tanks Break Through! by Alfred-Ingemar Berndt and From Lemberg to Bordeaux by Leo Leixner. Lehrer was interviewed on the History Channel series Mavericks, Miracles, and Medicine about his book Explorers of the Body,[23] as well as by the BBC for their series, Medical Mavericks, Beating Infection (episode 4).[24][25]
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