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Alfredo Jadresic

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Alfredo Arturo Jadresic Vargas (18 September 1925 – 30 September 2021) was a Chilean scientist and professor of medicine.[1] As a high jumper he competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics,[2] and placed ninth.[3]

Alfredo Jadresic at his vacation house at Tunquén (Chile), November 2005

Personal life

Jadresic was born in Iquique in September 1925. He came from a family of Croatian (Dalmatian) origin.[4] He died in Santiago on 1st October 2021, at the age of 96.[5] According to another source[1] the date was the 30th September.

Medical career

Jadresic got his Doctorate in medicine and was a professor of medicine at the University of Chile, and then Dean of Medicine from 1968 to 1972. In September 1973, after the coup d'état, he was arrested and spent 51 days in the National Stadium of Chile, but was released with no charges but forced to leave the country. He spent his exile in the Royal Sussex Hospital in Hastings, England. When democracy was restored he returned to Chile,[6] where he specialized in endocrinology at the University of Chile.[7] Jadresic gave an account of his career and life in a book published in 2007.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b "Dr. Alfredo Jadresic Vargas Obituary".
  2. ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Alfredo Jadresic". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
  3. ^ "Alfredo Jadresic Vargas".
  4. ^ "Čileanski pisci hrvatskog porijekla" [Chilean writers of Croatian origin].
  5. ^ "Universidad de Chile despide al médico y profesor emérito Alfredo Jadresic - Universidad de Chile". uchile.cl. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  6. ^ Alfredo Jadresic (1980) "Doctors and torture: an experience as a prisoner" J. Med. Ethics 6, 124-127
  7. ^ Jadresic, Alfredo; Ojeda, César; Pérez, Gilberto (2002). Psiconeuroendocrinología [Psychoendocrinology] (in Spanish). Santiago, Chile: Mediterraneo.
  8. ^ Jadresic, Alfredo. Historia de Chile en la vida de un médico. Santiago: Catalonia. ISBN 978-956-8303-65-5.