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A memorial service will be held for Dr. John R. Hogness, former president of the 91̽»¨and former dean of the 91̽»¨School of Medicine, from 2 to 4 p.m., Sunday, July 22, in the John R. Hogness Auditorium in the 91̽»¨Health Sciences Center. The service is open to faculty, staff and students. Hogness died July 2 at the age of 85.

Hogness was 91̽»¨medical school dean from 1964 to 1969, executive 91̽»¨vice president and vice president of the 91̽»¨Health Sciences from 1969 to 1971, and 91̽»¨president from 1974 to 1979, when he became president of the national Association of Academic Health Centers.

He served as the first president of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences from 1971 to 1974, and helped build the institute from scratch as an unbiased examiner of America’s health care problems. He became known for pulling together divergent viewpoints and for his insightful and innovative contributions to U.S. health policy. He was a widely published commentator on the U.S. health care system, and on challenges facing medical schools, health professional schools, and teaching hospitals. He was particularly interested in advancing the roles of nurses and physician assistants in patient care, and in the economics of health care.

When he left the 91̽»¨presidency, the Board of Regents established in his honor an annual symposium, featuring nationally renowned speakers on topical issues affecting health care, including the social and ethical aspects of medicine.

Hogness was personable, easygoing, and known for his sense of humor and informal manner. He tried to understand, first-hand if possible, what situations were like from another person’s point of view. In the late 1960s, for example, when rural towns faced a physician shortage, then-Dean of Medicine Hogness went to Omak, Wash., to fill-in for two weeks for a general practitioner to experience the day-to-day challenges of a country doctor.

Hogness helped bring together the academic university and community health-professionals through his diplomacy in town-gown relations. As president of the UW, Hogness was open to student feedback, and encouraged student evaluation of courses.

“People liked John and John liked people,” wrote Dr. Clement Finch, one of the original faculty members of the 91̽»¨School of Medicine, in his history of the medical school.

After his retirement, Hogness served as a consultant to such diverse organizations as the National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the office of the Surgeon General of the Army.

Hogness was born June 27, 1922, in Oakland, Calif. He attended Haverford College, and received a B.S. degree in chemistry in 1943 and an M.D. degree in 1946 from the University of Chicago. He did his residency in internal medicine (general adult medicine) at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City. He moved to Seattle because his first wife, Katharine, was from the Northwest, and because the 91̽»¨School of Medicine had recently opened.

At King County Hospital (now Harborview Medical Center), Hogness became chief medical resident in 1950. He then completed a fellowship in endocrinology with his mentor, the late Dr. Robert Williams, first chair of the 91̽»¨Department of Medicine. 

Hogness was in private practice in Seattle for seven years before joining the 91̽»¨faculty, and soon advanced to be the medical director of what was then University Hospital (now 91̽»¨Medical Center).

He is survived by his wife, Margaret, five children, four stepchildren, and a brother, David. His first wife, Katharine, died in 2004.

The family suggests that contributions in Hogness’ memory may be made to the contributor’s favorite charity.