George D. Lundberg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George D. Lundberg (born March 21, 1933) is an American board-certified pathologist and writer.[1]

Lundberg served as editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) for 17 years. In 1999, Lundberg was fired from this position after publishing a controversial article on how college students define oral sex. The article coincided with President Clinton's impeachment trial.[2] Executives from the American Medical Association stated that the article had nothing to do with medicine and it jeopardized the high standard of the journal.[3]

Lundberg from February 1999 to January 2009, was the editor of Medscape.[4] He currently serves as an editor-at-large for the site.[5]

Career in Pathology[]

  • Clinical Chemist and Pathologist Assistant Trainee, Druid City Hospital, 1953 and 1955.
  • Resident in Anatomic and Clinical Pathology, Brooke General Hospital, 1958-1962, with certification in both by American Board of Pathology, 1962
  • MS in Pathology, Baylor University, 1963
  • US Army (2nd Lt to LTC 1956-1967) staff pathologist Letterman General Hospital, 1962-64; Chief Pathologist William Beamont General Hospital, 1964-67.
  • Assoc Prof and Prof Pathology USC 1967-1977; Asst and Associate Director of Laboratories and Pathology, LAC-USC Medical Center, 1968-1977
  • Professor and Chair, UC Davis 1977-1982.
  • President, American Society for Clinical Pathology, 1990-1991.

Career in Medical Editing[]

1974-1982: Member, Editorial Board, Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

January 2, 1982-January 15, 1999: Editor in Chief, JAMA, and VP for Scientific Information AMA, with editorial responsibility for JAMA, 10 AMA Archives Journals, and American Medical News.

1999- 2009: Editor in Chief, Medscape, MedGenMed, and The Medscape Journal of Medicine.

2010-2018: Editor in Chief, CollabRx.

2010-2013: Editor at Large, MedPage Today.

2018-2021: Editor in Chief and Contributing Editor: Cancer Commons.

2016-2021: Editor in Chief, Curious Dr.George.

2013-2021: Editor at Large, Medscape.

Practice-changing Innovations[]

References[]

  1. ^ "George David Lundberg, M.D.". Retrieved December 08, 2018.
  2. ^ "Editor Fired Over Sex Article". CBS News. Retrieved December 08, 2018.
  3. ^ "Health Editor fired over oral sex story". BBC News. Retrieved December 08, 2018.
  4. ^ Romaine, M; Zatz, S; Brown, K; Lundberg, GD (2009). "So long but not farewell: The Medscape Journal of Medicine (1999-2009)". Medscape Journal of Medicine. 11 (1): 33. PMC 2654707. PMID 19295954. Retrieved 21 February 2009.
  5. ^ "George D. Lundberg, MD". Medscape. Retrieved December 08, 2018.

Further reading[]


Retrieved from ""