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When T T hen a US meeting devoted specifically to blood substitutes was held in 1974 under the sponsorship of the National Institutes of Health, the program committee had trouble finding enough speakers to fill out the program. These days at such meetings, limiting the number of speakers is the problem. And so it was at the recent International Symposium on Blood Substitutes, which reflected burgeoning interest in the subject over the past eight years. The symposium was held at Letterman Army Institute of Research (LAIR) at the Presidio of San Francisco; it was sponsored by the US Army Medical Research and Development Command, Fort Detrick, Md, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md. "I hope people don't think this was a shoot-out," said symposium co-chair Robert P. Geyer, MD, in his summation remarks at the end of the three-day program. He was referring to the profound
JAMA – American Medical Association
Published: Jan 14, 1983
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