Charles Stone Bryan (born 1942) is an American retired infectious disease physician, researcher, author and Heyward Gibbes distinguished professor emeritus of internal medicine at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine (UofSC). His contributions to medicine have included working on a formula for administering the maximum possible dose of penicillin to people with kidney failure which would treat the infection and avoid penicillin toxicity, and treating and writing on HIV/AIDS. He is also a noted medical historian and an authority on the life of William Osler.
He is a Master of the American College of Physicians, and has been president of the South Carolina Infectious Diseases Society, the American Osler Society and the Columbia Medical Society. His awards include the American Osler Society's Lifetime Achievement Award in 2010 and the Order of the Palmetto in 2013.
Bryan's publications include Osler: Inspirations from a Great Physician (1997), Infectious Diseases in Primary Care (2002), and Asylum Doctor; James Woods Babcock and the Red Plague of Pellagra (2014), the result of 15 years of research.
Early life and education
Charles Bryan, known also as "Charley",[1] was born and brought up in Columbia, South Carolina.[2] His father, Leon S. Bryan, was a physician who graduated from the Medical College of South Carolina during the Depression.[2][3] His mother, Mary Morrill Leadbeater Bryan, was the daughter of John Leadbeater, Jr. (1872-1917), one of the last proprietors of the Stabler Leadbeater Apothecary in Alexandria, Virginia. Mary L. Bryan was a founding member of the League of Women Voters chapter in Columbia, South Carolina, and served as president of the South Carolina state chapter of the League of Women Voters from 1961 to 1963.[4]
Charles attended Dreher High School and then Harvard College.[5] At Harvard, he spent some time under sociologist David Riesman and wrote on slavery on a South Carolina rice plantation. This became the start of Bryan's parallel career in medical history.[6]
In 1967 he completed his five years of medical education and received both a BA and MD.[5][7]
Career
In 1974, he returned to Columbia after completing training at both the Johns Hopkins and the Vanderbilt University Medical Center and then entered private practice in internal medicine and infectious diseases. In 1977, he became a charter faculty member at the UofSC, where he has served as director of the Division of Infectious Diseases between 1977 and 1993, chair of the Department of Medicine between 1992 and 2000, and director of the Center for bioethics and medical humanities from 2000.[7]
In the early 1970s, Bryan and nephrologist Bill Stone worked out a formula for administering the maximum possible dose of penicillin to a person in kidney failure which would treat the infection while avoiding penicillin toxicity.[2][8][9]
He served as a hospital epidemiologist at a number of hospitals in the Columbia area. For the care of patients with HIV/AIDS, a disease Bryan has treated and written on and stressed the importance of understanding the social and historical context of,[10] he was the principal founder of the Midlands Care Consortium in South Carolina.[7] He also contributed to South Carolina's early response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic.[11]
In 2020, he published Sir William Osler: An Encyclopedia, which included contributions from 135 authors.[12][13][14]
The Association of Professors of Medicine created the Charles S. Bryan Dinner in recognition of his contributions to that organization.[7] In 2002, a portrait of Bryan was completed by artist Tarleton Blackwell. It was based on a photograph taken in 1994, in Osler's study at 13 Norham Gardens, Oxford.[7] In 2003, the Charles S. Bryan History of Medicine Room at the University of South Carolina was named in his honor,[5] and the same institution also created the Charles S. Bryan Scholar Award to recognize each year an outstanding internal medicine resident.[7] In 2017, the South Carolina chapter of the American College of Physicians created the Charles S. Bryan Lecture in the Humanities.[22]
Personal and family
Bryan is married to the former Donna Hennessee, who founded the Seeds of Hope Farmers Market Project in South Carolina.[23][24]
Selected publications
Bryan has authored a number of works on the pharmacology of antibiotics, bloodstream infections, and hospital-acquired infections as well as on the history of medicine, particularly relating to Sir William Osler, on whom he is considered an authority. He has made over 500 contributions to medical literature including writing 12 books.[1] In 2020, he led the creation of William Osler: An Encyclopedia.[25]
Between 1977 and 2012, he was editor of the Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association and in addition he has reviewed for a number of other medical journals,[7] including Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology.[32]
Articles
He has authored a landmark article on the over-prescribing of antibiotics.[19]
Bryan, Charles S.; Stone, W. J. (1975). ""Comparably Massive" Penicillin G Therapy in Renal Failure". Annals of Internal Medicine. 82 (2): 189–95. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-82-2-189. PMID1115440.
Bryan, Charles S. (1999). "Treatment of pneumococcal pneumonia: the case for penicillin G". The American Journal of Medicine. 107 (1A): 63–68. doi:10.1016/S0002-9343(99)00099-6. PMID10451011.
^Reese, Richard E.; Betts, Robert F. (2003). "27. Antibiotic use: Penicillin". In Betts, Robert F.; Penn, Robert L.; Chapman, Stanley W. (eds.). Reese and Betts' a Practical Approach to Infectious Diseases (5th ed.). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 1003. ISBN978-0-7817-3281-9.
^Edelson, Paul J. (1 December 1998). "Osler: Inspirations from a Great Physician. Charles S. Bryan". Isis. 89 (4): 751. doi:10.1086/384210. ISSN0021-1753.
^Burns, Chester R. (2004). "The Quotable Osler (review)". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 78. Johns Hopkins University Press: 245–246. doi:10.1353/bhm.2004.0010. S2CID71240594.
^Graner, John L. (September 2003). "The Quotable Osler". Mayo Clinic Proceedings. 78 (9): 1192. doi:10.4065/78.9.1190-a.
^Bryan, Charles S. "Asylum Doctor". www.sc.edu. Retrieved 16 May 2019.