Wladimir Wertelecki
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! colspan="2"| Wladimir Wertelecki
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Born || (1936) In
Rivne, Volyn,
Ukraine (at the time Poland)
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Residence || USA
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Fields ||
Clinical Teratology,
Genetics and
Pediatrics
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Postgraduate || Intern, Muniz Hospital, Buenos Aires, Argentina (1961 - 1962). Intern, Deaconess Hospital, St. Louis, MO, U.S. (1963). Resident in Pediatrics, St. Louis Children's Hospital and
Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, MO (1964 - 1966). Fellow in Clinical Genetics,
Boston Children's Hospital and
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (1966 - 1968)
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Institutions || Instructor, Pediatrics,
Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (1968–1969). Senior Surgeon, U.S. Public Health Commissioned Corps., Epidemiology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD (1969–1972). Assistant Professor, Pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC (1972). Associate Professor, Pediatrics and Pathology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC (1973–1974). Professor and chairman, Department of Medical Genetics,
University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL (1974–2010). Professor Emeritus, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL (2010-). Director, OMNI-Net Ukraine, Birth Defects Monitoring Programs (1999-)
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Alma mater || Medical School,
University of Buenos Aires, Argentina (1956–1961)
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Mentors || , ,
Bernardo Houssay,
Niсeto S. Loizaga, M.D.,
Alexis Hartmann,
Harold Cummins, PhD.,
Josef Warkany,
Daniel C. Gajdusek,
John Gofman
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Currently known for || Population-based monitoring of developmental anomalies in
Chornobyl-impacted regions
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Notable awards ||
Corresponding Member of the "Academia Nacional de Medicina" (Buenos Aires, Argentina) and Foreign Member of the
National Academy of Sciences (Kyiv, Ukraine), Doctor Honoris Causa,
National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Kyiv, Ukraine) and
Lviv Medical University (Lviv, Ukraine)
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Wladimir Wertelecki is a
pediatrician and
medical geneticist. In 1974, he established one of the first free-standing Departments of
Medical Genetics at the new
South Alabama University College of Medicine in Mobile, Alabama, U.S.A. Following his retirement as chairman and emeritus Professor of Medical Genetics, Pediatrics, and Pathology, he continued his investigations into the prevention of developmental anomalies as a Project Scientist at the Department of Pediatrics,
University of California San Diego. Since 1996, his research has focused mainly on alcohol and the impact of
ionizing radiation on
congenital anomalies. He is the author over 135 scientific reports.
He established a regional network of clinics across southern Alabama and West Florida, and in 1978 he organized the Southern Genetic Group. This group expanded into the South-Eastern Regional Genetics Group, which enhanced genetic services in six states. Wertelecki also helped local Native-Americans gain
Federal Recognition in Alabama.
In 1992, he made a presentation to the
US Senate regarding the
reproductive risks posed by
Chornobyl radiation. In 2000, following an initial sponsorship by
USAID, he established the OMNI-Net program, a
not-for-profit network, to investigate the reproductive risks posed by exposure to alcohol and
ionizing radiation from
Chornobyl. The program trained Ukrainian professionals to monitor the frequency of
birth defects.
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