A Physician’s Journey with the Hepatitis C Virus
Historical, Medical and Ethical Reflections
by
Book Details
About the Book
This book is about the life of a physician, scientist, psychiatrist, and bioethicist that has been interwoven with the coexistence of the hepatitis C virus (HCV). It entails medical, ethical, spiritual, and historical reflections, as well as the objective and personal history and science of viral hepatitis as well. His life might also be seen as a story of multiple survival episodes—not all related to HCV—that suggests providential oversight.
About the Author
The author spent his formative years under a dictatorial regime and survived an almost fatal case of hepatitis as a teenager, when the relevant viruses were not known yet. For several years he did biomedical research in his native Hungary (MD), then Italy, and the USA (PhD in biochemistry). After turning to clinical medicine, getting married and becoming a naturalized citizen, he was diagnosed with chronic hepatitis of unknown origin. By the time he completed his psychiatric training, became a faculty of the University of Michigan and father of newborn son, he developed cirrhosis. Nevertheless, he established the first academic Infant Psychiatry Program and did research on affect development, expression, and regulation. Later, he became medical director and full-time psychiatrist in Lynchburg, Virginia. Almost forty years after the acute hepatitis, liver transplant coincided with the recognition that the hepatitis C virus was the pathogen all along. It infected his new liver too. After retirement, he became a bioethicist (MA) and continued academic work as a part-time child-adolescent psychiatrist as well. He developed hepatitis C cirrhosis twenty years after transplantation, but new medications eliminated the virus before his liver would have decompensate. All these life events brought about spiritual reflections and transformations.