Benjamin Lichtiger, MD, PhD, MBA, Oral History Interview, June 11, 2012

Benjamin Lichtiger, MD, PhD, MBA, Oral History Interview, June 11, 2012

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Description

Major Topics Covered:

  • Personal and educational background
  • Philosophy of Transfusion Medicine: an integral part of patient care and the diagnostic/treatment team
  • Transfusion services at MD Anderson; a “boutique blood bank”; individualized patient needs
  • Bringing business practices to blood services:

Identifier

LichtigerB_01_20120611

Publication Date

6-11-2012

Publisher

The Historical Resources Center, Research Medical Library, The University of Texas Cancer Center

City

Houston, Texas

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.

Topics Covered

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas System. M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute at Houston, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute

Disciplines

History of Science, Technology, and Medicine | Oncology | Oral History

About the Interview

ORIGINAL Interview Profile #18:

Dr. Benjamin Lichtiger, M.D., Ph.D., M.B.A. Submitted by: Tacey A. Rosolowski, Ph.D. Date revised: 30 June 2014 This 2 hour and 35 minute interview with Dr. Benjamin Lichtiger, M.D., Ph.D., M.B.A. [b. 1940, Argentina], takes place in two sessions conducted in June of 2013. Tacey A. Rosolowski is the interviewer. The interview takes place in a conference room in the Section of Transfusion Medicine in the Main Building on MD Anderson’s main campus.

Dr. Lichtiger is a pathologist and specialist in transfusion medicine who came to MD Anderson in 1968 as a Fellow in Pathology. By 1973 he was a faculty associate in the Department of Laboratory Medicine, serving as Acting Chief of the Blood Bank. In 1974 he became an Assistant Professor and advanced to Section Chief of Transfusion Medicine, a position he held until 2001, overseeing all functions of MD Anderson’s Blood Bank. Dr. Lichtiger also served as Chair of the Department of Laboratory Medicine from 1999 until his retirement in 2008, though he continued as ad interim Chair until 2010, and continues to work nearly full time at the Blood Bank in his part time role as a clinical professor in the Department of Laboratory Medicine in the Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine.

Dr. Lichtiger earned his M.D. in 1964 from the University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina. He did a residency in Pathology at Fernandez Hospital in Buenos Aires in 1955-66, then emigrated to the United States for additional Residency training in Pathology at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago, Illinois (1966-68). He came to Houston to earn his Ph.D. at the University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (conferred in 1974, at which time he also became an American citizen). Dr. Lichtiger went on to earn an M.B.A. in 1998 from the Lady of the Lake University, Houston TX.

In this interview Dr. Lichtiger gives a detailed look inside the workings of MD Anderson’s transfusion services, the largest in the country and one that operates as a “boutique blood bank,” in his words, serving the highly individualized needs of MD Anderson patients. Dr. Lichtiger is adamant that blood bank services are an integral part of patient care, and that the transfusion medicine pathologist is part of a patient’s diagnostic and treatment team. He gives vivid documentation of how MD Anderson’s Transfusion Medicine services adhere to this mission. His business background hints at another dimension of his approach to clinical medical services. Dr. Lichtiger has streamlined laboratory processes to increase efficiency, accuracy, and ensure a high quality of all blood products. He describes how his business perspective emerged and influenced the Blood Bank seen at MD Anderson today. Dr. Lichtiger is passionate and articulate. In addition to the wealth of detail about Transfusion Medicine at MD Anderson, Dr. Lichtiger speaks with great feeling about R. Lee Clark and the special environment that MD Anderson offered to researchers in the 1970s and early 1980s.

Conditions Governing Access

Redacted

Benjamin Lichtiger, MD, PhD, MBA, Oral History Interview, June 11, 2012

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