In 2001 Fischer accepted the position of Chairman of the Department of Surgery and Surgeon-in-Chief at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, MA and was appointed William V. McDermott Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School.[2] Fischer recruited 29 surgeons in his first 3 years at Beth Israel Deaconess, which was key in mending the institution's finances, after a 1996 merger resulted in a loss of more than $280 Million for the hospital.[3]
Fischer's research expertise includes nutritional support, cachexia, sepsis, enterocutaneous fistulas, and surgical education. In 1999 Fischer was one of 24 surgeons to be recognized by Archives of Surgery for having made "significant contributions to surgery in the areas of research, clinical care, and surgical education" in the 20th century.[4]
Fischer published over 850 journal articles and edited 21 books including the standard surgical textbook, Mastery of Surgery.[5] He has served on the editorial board for 13 journals including The American Journal of Surgery, Journal of American College of Surgeons, Archives of Surgery, Journal of Surgical Research, and Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition.[6]
In 2008, Dr. Carol Warfield sued Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Paul Levy, the former CEO of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians and Fischer for discrimination and retaliation. The parties resolved their dispute in February 2013 when Beth Israel Deaconess paid Warfield $7 million, clarified its policies and procedures for employees to report discrimination, agreed to sponsor a lecture series on women's health and women's achievement in surgery, and named the hospital's pain clinic in Warfield's honor. In reaching the agreement, the Defendants denied any wrongdoing in the matter and there was no judicial finding of wrongdoing on behalf of Fischer.[7]
American Surgical Association Medallion for Surgical Research (2008)[9]
Distinguished Service Award of the American College of Surgeons (1997)[10]
Selected publications
Fischer JE, Musacchio J, Kopin IJ, Axelrod J. : Effects of denervation on the uptake and beta-hydroxylation of tyramine in the rat salivary gland. Life Sci. 1964;3:413-9.[11]
Fischer JE, Bower RH, Atamian S, Welling R. Comparison of distal and proximal splenorenal shunts: a randomized prospective trial. Ann. Surg. 1981;194(4):531-44.[12]
Hasselgren PO, James JH, Fischer JE. Inhibited muscle amino acid uptake in sepsis. Ann. Surg. 1986;203(4):360-5.[13]
Hasselgren PO, Fischer JE. Muscle cachexia: current concepts of intracellular mechanisms and molecular regulation. Ann. Surg. 2001;233(1):9-17.[14]
Evenson AR, Fischer JE. Current management of enterocutaneous fistula. J Gastrointest Surg. 2006;10(3):455-64.[15]
Fischer JE. The impending disappearance of the general surgeon. JAMA. 2007;298(18):2191-3.[16]
References
^ abHasselgren, Per-Olof; Richard G. Azizkhan; Robert H. Bower; James M. Hurst; John J. McDonough; Henry W. Neale; Glenn D. Warden (April 2002). "Festschrift for Josef E. Fischer". The American Journal of Surgery. 183 (4): 325–492. doi:10.1016/s0002-9610(02)00811-5. PMID11975917.
^Hasselgren, Per-Olof; Richard G. Azizkhan; Robert H. Bower; James M. Hurst; John J. McDonough; Henry W. Neale; Glenn D. Warden (April 2002). "Festschrift for Josef E. Fischer, MD". The American Journal of Surgery. 183 (4): 325–392. doi:10.1016/s0002-9610(02)00811-5. PMID11975917.
^Kowalczyk, Liz (December 5, 2004). "Boston Hospital Mends Its Finances; Beth Israel Deaconess Profits". Boston Globe.
^Fischer, JE; Musacchio, J; Kopin, IJ; Axelrod, J (1964). "Effects of denervation on the uptake and beta-hydroxylation of tyramine in the rat salivary gland". Life Sci. 3 (5): 413–9. doi:10.1016/0024-3205(64)90201-2. PMID14198482.