Abstract
After training in physics during World War II, I spent 2 years designing radar at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and then switched to biophysics. After medical school and a residency, I was doctor drafted to National Institutes of Health where I studied blood gas transport in hypothermia and developed the carbon dioxide electrode and the blood gas analyzer (pH, partial pressure of O 2, and partial pressure of CO 2). I joined the University of California San Francisco in 1958 in a new anesthesia department and new Cardiovascular Research Institute. My research aims were anesthesia patient monitoring, respiratory physiology, blood gas transport, and high-altitude acclimatization and pathology. © 2013 Severinghaus; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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Severinghaus, J. W. (2013). Career perspective: John W. Severinghaus. Extreme Physiology and Medicine, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/2046-7648-2-29
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