Age, Biography and Wiki

Clarence Lushbaugh (Clarence Chancelum Lushbaugh, Jr.) was born on 15 March, 1916 in Covington, Kentucky, US, is a physician. Discover Clarence Lushbaugh's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 84 years old?

Popular As Clarence Chancelum Lushbaugh, Jr.
Occupation N/A
Age 84 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 15 March, 1916
Birthday 15 March
Birthplace Covington, Kentucky, US
Date of death (2000-10-13) Oak Ridge, Tennessee, US
Died Place Oak Ridge, Tennessee, US
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 15 March. He is a member of famous physician with the age 84 years old group.

Clarence Lushbaugh Height, Weight & Measurements

At 84 years old, Clarence Lushbaugh height not available right now. We will update Clarence Lushbaugh's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
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Who Is Clarence Lushbaugh's Wife?

His wife is Mary Helen Chisolm (1942–1963) Dorothy Bess Hale (1963–2000, his death)

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Mary Helen Chisolm (1942–1963) Dorothy Bess Hale (1963–2000, his death)
Sibling Not Available
Children 3

Clarence Lushbaugh Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Clarence Lushbaugh worth at the age of 84 years old? Clarence Lushbaugh’s income source is mostly from being a successful physician. He is from United States. We have estimated Clarence Lushbaugh's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income physician

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Timeline

2000

Lushbaugh's first marriage to Mary Helen Chisolm in 1942 produced three children – William, who was a professor at the University of Mississippi, and Bob and Nancy, both of whom worked at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Lushbaugh and Chisolm divorced in 1963. His second marriage was to Dorothy Bess Hale in 1963 in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Dorothy was a research assistant at Los Alamos during his tenure there. They remained married until his death; she died on December 10, 2000.

Lushbaugh died on Friday, October 13, 2000, from complications related to Alzheimer's disease.

1996

In 1996, after discovering the fate of her father's remains through a series of information requests to Los Alamos, Katie Kelley Mareau, Cecil Kelley's daughter, initiated a class-action lawsuit against the Los Alamos Medical Center, the University of California (who ran the laboratory), and Lushbaugh individually. The Los Alamos Medical Center and the university settled five years later in 2001, but Lushbaugh neither settled nor conceded any wrongdoing. During a deposition, he was asked who gave him permission to extract the organs from Cecil Kelley's body. He replied, "God gave me permission".

1986

During the Chernobyl reactor meltdown in 1986, he was one of several radiation experts whose counsel was requested by the United States government. He traveled to the Soviet Union during this time to provide such counsel to American embassies and personnel in the region, and was reportedly impressed at the efficiency of the Soviet response to the incident.

1984

Lushbaugh left Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 1984.

1980

Lushbaugh returned to academia in 1980, joining the faculty of the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as an Adjunct Professor of Epidemiology.

1978

To this end, when the next-of-kin was asked to authorize an autopsy at Los Alamos, a provision was included in the form to allow, at the discretion of the examining physician, the removal of tissues and other specimens for research purposes. The explicit intention to use these tissues in the experimental program, however, was not revealed to those who signed the authorization. Additionally, most deaths that did not occur within the Los Alamos Medical Center fell under the authority of the coroner, who would be able to authorize the tissue removal without any involvement or awareness from the next-of-kin. In his capacity as the Assistant District Health Officer for Los Alamos County, however, Lushbaugh was himself the de facto county coroner. The program would last until 1978 – the first twelve years operating entirely from the Los Alamos Medical Center under Lushbaugh's purview.

1975

In 1975, Lushbaugh became the Chairman of the Medical and Health Sciences Division and was also promoted to Chief of Radiation Medicine. He was involved around this time in the establishment of the Radiation Emergency Assistance Center/Training Site, a facility at Oak Ridge that oversaw emergency care and treatment of patients following radiation exposure accidents. He served as its first director from 1976 to 1977. The facility became a major resource for education and emergency response coordination concerning radiological accidents, and is a key consulting body for the National Nuclear Security Administration, part of the Department of Energy.

1963

In 1963, shortly after his divorce from his first wife, Lushbaugh left the Los Alamos Laboratory to move to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, to join the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies as the Chief Scientist of the Medical and Health Sciences Division. He would cite his divorce as part of the reason for the move, but the largest influence was the opportunity to continue his work with living subjects, whereas in Los Alamos he was limited to working with the deceased.

1961

Lushbaugh was a prolific researcher, and throughout his career his name appeared on over 150 scientific publications. From 1961 to 1971, he was an associate editor for Radiation Research, an academic journal of the Radiation Research Society. Additionally, he was a founding member of and served on the Plutonium Registry Advisory Committee from 1968 to 1982.

1960

At Oak Ridge, Lushbaugh became involved in research at the behest of NASA and the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) designed to ascertain the point at which exposure to radiation would begin to cause acute radiation sickness. Starting in 1960 and continuing until 1974, around 89 patients who were admitted to the Medical and Health Sciences Division clinic for cancer treatment were directly exposed to high levels of ionizing radiation as human test subjects. Lushbaugh was brought on in 1964, along with hematologist Gould Andrews, to lead the project.

1958

What became known as the Los Alamos Human Tissue Analysis Program began in 1958 after Lushbaugh performed an autopsy on the body of Cecil Kelley, who died of radiation-induced heart failure following a criticality accident at Los Alamos. Lushbaugh identified an opportunity to analyze Kelley's remains to confirm or improve Los Alamos safety procedures concerning radiation exposure. To this end, Lushbaugh extracted some of the irradiated organs and tissues from Kelley for analysis, eventuating the development of safer radiation exposure limits. The propriety of the removal of Kelley's organs was eventually called into question, and his daughter filed a successful lawsuit against Lushbaugh and Los Alamos to this end in 1996.

On December 30, 1958, at the Los Alamos laboratory, 38-year-old chemical operator Cecil Kelley was involved in a criticality accident in which he absorbed 36 gray of ionizing radiation from a mixing tank containing highly concentrated plutonium-239. He died 35 hours after this exposure from heart failure caused by the radiation he absorbed. After his death, his body was sent to Lushbaugh at the Los Alamos Medical Center for autopsy. Lushbaugh had worked with radiological injuries in the past, but Kelley's autopsy presented an opportunity that none before it had. Previously, safety assessments regarding radiation exposure had been reached based on predictive interpretations of urine tests. As an employee of Los Alamos directly involved in the handling of radioactive materials, Kelley had given urine samples before he died, and now with his autopsy and the circumstances that preceded it, Lushbaugh identified a unique opportunity to confirm the validity of those tests and associated exposure limits, as well as ascertain the distribution of plutonium throughout the organs and skeleton. Though it was considered acceptable to take samples during an autopsy to confirm diagnoses or cause of death, Lushbaugh proceeded during the Kelley autopsy to remove more than eight pounds (3.6 kg) of organs from the body, including the brain and spinal cord, which he placed into empty glass mayonnaise jars for transport back to the biomedical lab.

1950

During his stay in Los Alamos, he served from 1950 to 1958 as the Assistant District Health Officer for Los Alamos County.

Throughout the 1950s during his career at Los Alamos, Lushbaugh had built a reputation as an expert on radiological pathology, specifically concerning the investigation of nuclear accidents. In this capacity, he was called in 1961 to the National Reactor Testing Station in Idaho Falls, Idaho, to aid in the investigation of the meltdown of the SL-1 experimental nuclear power reactor that had resulted in the deaths of its three operators. Because of the nature of the reactor meltdown, the bodies of all three men had been exposed to the reactor core and were extremely radioactive. Lushbaugh was called to perform the autopsy of the men, but because of the radioactivity of the remains, could not be in the same room as them to do so. In order to perform any significant degree of analysis, he and his team elected to remove the most radioactive parts of the bodies. To do this, he used a hacksaw blade that had been welded to a ten-foot (3.0 m) length of pipe, which he maneuvered from outside of the room. These pieces were sealed in steel drums and buried underground with concrete as radioactive waste in the desert near the reactor.

1949

Lushbaugh left the University of Chicago in 1949 to join the Medical Center of the Los Alamos National Laboratory as a pathologist. The job had been offered to him by Franklin McLean, and involved both research work in Los Alamos Biomedical Research Group, as well as clinical work at the Los Alamos Medical Center. Pursuant to this clinical requirement, he applied and took the exam for a medical license in New Mexico. He passed the American Medical Association's scientific examination, and, though he had completed no formal residency, he was given credit for part of his tenure at the University of Chicago as medical practice and received a medical license.

1948

Lushbaugh returned to his studies and finished his M.D. in 1948, having come to the conclusion his lack of formal medical education would negatively impact his ability to conduct clinical research.

1942

Lushbaugh completed his doctoral program in 1942. His thesis, titled The Effect of Alcoholic Intoxication Upon Acquired Resistance to Pneumococcal Infection in Rabbits, was published the following year in the Journal of Immunology. Following this, he joined the faculty of the University as a pathologist and pathology professor. During World War II, his research efforts were structured by the war effort, and he worked within the university's toxicology laboratory, researching nerve agents for use as chemical weapons in the war effort, research which employed various animals as test subjects. With his advisor Franklin C. McLean, he explored the use of nitrogen mustards for this purpose, later determining that their lymphotoxic properties had potential chemotherapeutic applications. He received credit on a study that explored these applications with human test subjects.

1939

Lushbaugh started his career in 1939 as a professor in the Department of Pathology at the University of Chicago, while he was working towards his Ph.D. His early medical research was directed by the onset of World War II, and resulted in the discovery of the chemotherapeutic potential of compounds being tested as chemical weapons. After completing his medical degree from the school in 1948, he joined the Los Alamos National Laboratory as a pathologist, and began to develop expertise applying the science to victims of radiological accidents.

1937

He enrolled at the University of Cincinnati, where he studied for three years before moving in 1937 to the University of Chicago, finishing his bachelor's degree in anatomy in 1938.

1926

During the course of his graduate studies at the University of Chicago medical school, he worked closely with Paul Steiner, a professor in the Department of Pathology. The two published the results of a study in which they describe the condition of amniotic fluid embolism based on a case study of eight autopsies of pregnant women who died suddenly during childbirth. Though the complication was originally described in 1926 by J. R. Meyer at the University of São Paulo, Lushbaugh and Steiner's 1941 report was considered a landmark publication that enabled widespread recognition of the diagnosis within the medical community. It was eventually republished as such in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

1916

Clarence Chancelum Lushbaugh, Jr. (March 15, 1916 – October 13, 2000) was an American physician and pathologist. He was considered an expert in radiological accidents and injuries, as well as a pioneer in radiation safety research, and he is known for his controversial research involving human subjects.

Clarence Chancelum Lushbaugh, Jr. was born on March 15, 1916, in Covington, Kentucky. His father, Clarence Lushbaugh, Sr., was a railroad freight worker who died after contracting the Spanish flu in 1918. Lushbaugh attended Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati, Ohio, near where he grew up. As a child, he was an excellent student, and was elected class president during his senior year, beating out fellow student and future colleague Eugene Saenger. He was also an avid participant in the Boy Scouts of America.