RT Book, Section A1 Longo, Dan L. SR Print(0) ID 1128329262 T1 Preface T2 Harrison's Hematology and Oncology, 2e YR 2013 FD 2013 PB McGraw-Hill Education PP New York, NY SN 9780071814904 LK hemonc.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1128329262 RD 2024/03/29 AB Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine has a long and distinguished tradition in the field of hematology. Maxwell Wintrobe, whose work actually established hematology as a distinct subspecialty of medicine, was a founding editor of the book and participated in the first seven editions, taking over for Tinsley Harrison as editor-in-chief on the sixth and seventh editions. Wintrobe, born in 1901, began his study of blood in earnest in 1927 as an assistant in medicine at Tulane University in New Orleans. He continued his studies at Johns Hopkins from 1930 to 1943 and moved to the University of Utah in 1943, where he remained until his death in 1986. He invented a variety of the measures that are routinely used to characterize red blood cell abnormalities, including the hematocrit, the red cell indices, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and defined the normal and abnormal values for these parameters, among many other important contributions in a 50-year career.