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- W2022253183 abstract "Jack was born in Fort Worth, TX, and raised in Dubuque, IA. He entered the Navy in 1943 serving on a destroyer for several years. He received his BS and MD degrees from the University of Iowa and in 1951 came to San Francisco General Hospital as an intern. A residency in Orthopedic Surgery at the University of California San Francisco and a fellowship in hand surgery with Dr. Joseph Boyes in Los Angeles followed. In 1958 he opened an office for the practice of hand surgery in Oakland, CA, and continued there until he retired in 1998.During his 40 years in practice, he garnered many awards and honors but what he did best was to set a very high standard of care of patients with hand afflictions. He was Mr. Hand Surgery of the East Bay region of the San Francisco megalopolis. He loved hand surgery in all aspects. He was always available and always willing to spend as much time as he and the patient required to get the very best possible results. He was generous with colleagues in giving advice but he did not suffer fools easily. Unlike many who savor retirement, Jack often wished he was back in the middle of things with all the vigor he had in the middle years of practice.He was elected to the ASSH in 1967 at a time when the organization still had many features of an exclusive club. One could count on seeing him at annual meetings carefully listening to all papers given, taking pictures of many of the slides, talking to colleagues, and asking penetrating questions. Many went to ASSH meetings to socialize and learn. Jack went mainly to learn and teach.He had a great interest in micro-surgery and was one of the first in the Bay Area to utilize micro techniques to treat both vascular and nerve injuries. He developed great expertise in treating the difficult problem of epidermolysis bullosa. He had a special interest in problems of nerve repair and treatment of traumatic neuromas. He served as chief of hand surgery at both Highland Hospital (the trauma center serving Oakland) and Children’s Hospital of Oakland. For a time in the 70s and early 80s, he had a hand preceptorsip/fellowship in his office. He taught generations of residents, serving on the clinical faculty of the University of California, San Francisco, and was Emeritus Clinical Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at the time of his death.There was a non-medical side to his life. He loved food and wine and was extraordinarily knowledgeable about both. He loved to travel and made trips to Africa, Asia, and South America, which sometimes had both vocational and avocational aspects. He had a great interest in the natural world and was an active member of the California Academy of Sciences.He will be missed greatly by his family, friends, colleagues, and former patients. Jack was born in Fort Worth, TX, and raised in Dubuque, IA. He entered the Navy in 1943 serving on a destroyer for several years. He received his BS and MD degrees from the University of Iowa and in 1951 came to San Francisco General Hospital as an intern. A residency in Orthopedic Surgery at the University of California San Francisco and a fellowship in hand surgery with Dr. Joseph Boyes in Los Angeles followed. In 1958 he opened an office for the practice of hand surgery in Oakland, CA, and continued there until he retired in 1998. During his 40 years in practice, he garnered many awards and honors but what he did best was to set a very high standard of care of patients with hand afflictions. He was Mr. Hand Surgery of the East Bay region of the San Francisco megalopolis. He loved hand surgery in all aspects. He was always available and always willing to spend as much time as he and the patient required to get the very best possible results. He was generous with colleagues in giving advice but he did not suffer fools easily. Unlike many who savor retirement, Jack often wished he was back in the middle of things with all the vigor he had in the middle years of practice. He was elected to the ASSH in 1967 at a time when the organization still had many features of an exclusive club. One could count on seeing him at annual meetings carefully listening to all papers given, taking pictures of many of the slides, talking to colleagues, and asking penetrating questions. Many went to ASSH meetings to socialize and learn. Jack went mainly to learn and teach. He had a great interest in micro-surgery and was one of the first in the Bay Area to utilize micro techniques to treat both vascular and nerve injuries. He developed great expertise in treating the difficult problem of epidermolysis bullosa. He had a special interest in problems of nerve repair and treatment of traumatic neuromas. He served as chief of hand surgery at both Highland Hospital (the trauma center serving Oakland) and Children’s Hospital of Oakland. For a time in the 70s and early 80s, he had a hand preceptorsip/fellowship in his office. He taught generations of residents, serving on the clinical faculty of the University of California, San Francisco, and was Emeritus Clinical Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at the time of his death. There was a non-medical side to his life. He loved food and wine and was extraordinarily knowledgeable about both. He loved to travel and made trips to Africa, Asia, and South America, which sometimes had both vocational and avocational aspects. He had a great interest in the natural world and was an active member of the California Academy of Sciences. He will be missed greatly by his family, friends, colleagues, and former patients." @default.
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- W2022253183 date "2006-10-01" @default.
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- W2022253183 title "Jack William Tupper January 19, 1925—May 25, 2006" @default.
- W2022253183 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsa.2006.08.011" @default.
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