Pavel Mikhailovich Krasin (March 8, 1875, Kazan - March 22, 1946 , Moscow), head. Department of Topographic Anatomy and Operative Surgery (1918-1928), General Surgery (1928-1930)
| Pavel Mikhailovich Krasin | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | March 8, 1875 |
| Place of Birth | Kazan |
| Date of death | March 22, 1946 (71 year) |
| Place of death | Moscow |
| Scientific field | the medicine |
| Place of work | |
| Known as | |
Biography
Born in the family of a professor of the Kazan Theological Academy. He graduated in 1894 from the 3rd Kazan Gymnasium and entered the medical faculty of KU, receiving in 1899 a medical degree with honors. After graduating from the university, he was determined as supernumerary intern at the KU hospital surgical clinic, and in 1901 he was approved as a staff intern at this clinic and held this position until March 1903. Then Krasin was granted a scholarship for two years to prepare for a professorship. Prof. I. A. Praksin, recommending Krasin to the vacancy of a professorial scholarship, noted: “Acting as an intern with diligence and knowledge, he showed himself not only an able and thinking doctor, but also managed to discover remarkable teaching skills as a direct assistant to the professor, supervising on practical classes in the production of certain operations and dressings of medical students of the 5 course. ” In view of the prolonged approval of him as a professorial scholar at the Ministry of Public Education, P. M. entered the service of the district doctor in the Ufa province, where he headed the site and did operations in the city hospital.
During the Russian-Japanese war he was on the battlefields from May 20, 1904 to October 14, 1905 as a doctor of the Kazan University squad. In this regard, a scholarship was retained by order of the University Board of Management for PM, and its issuance began after his return from the war to the university.
In May 1907 he defended his doctoral thesis "On the doctrine of the regeneration of peripheral nerves after damaging them." In 1908, Mr .. sent abroad for 1 year to get acquainted with the formulation of clinical teaching in clinics and hospitals in Berlin, Paris, Lausanne, Bern and Vienna. In addition, he specially studied the clinic of diseases of the ear, throat and nose. After returning from a business trip in November 1909, P. M. was approved as a supernumerary assistant, and in March 1911, as a assistant professor in the department of hospital surgery, and was assigned to teach otiatry. In 1912, he was moved to the position of prosector at the Department of Operative Surgery with KU topographic anatomy, and from 1914 he again conducted a compulsory otiatry course.
During the First World War he held consecutive positions as an intern and senior doctor in the 12th Red Cross infirmary, in the 1st and 59th city hospitals, and also read a new course in the care of the wounded.
In October 1917, a competition was announced for the vacant department of operative surgery with topographic anatomy of the CU, in which 5 people took part. PM received the highest number of votes and was elected an extraordinary professor of the named department. During the civil war, P. M. worked as a surgeon in the Red Cross hospitals, in the 93rd Combined Military Hospital, in the 12th Main Military Hospital, and in the surgical department of the Shamovskaya Hospital.
In 1927, the University Board of Management P.M. was sent to France to study modern methods of teaching operative surgery and topographic anatomy. In 1931, he was confirmed in the position of professor of the propaedeutic surgical clinic and in the same year he was released from the obligations of the director of this clinic in connection with its folding.
In the first days of the Great Patriotic War, at the age of 66, he voluntarily went to the front. For two years he worked as a leading surgeon at evacuation hospitals stationed in Arkhangelsk, Volokolamsk , Kuntsev and Barvikha (near Moscow). Member of the battle for Moscow. In 1943 he was demobilized and removed from military registration in the rank of lieutenant colonel of the medical service (for health reasons). On November 16, 1943, he wrote in writing to the Director of the Moscow Institute of Chemical Technology P. V. Dybina with a request for admission to the military department of the institute for the course of military-sanitary training. Worked at the institute until the end of 1943.
- E.N. Budreyko, A.P. Zhukov. Professors of the University of Mendeleev: XX century M .: RCSTU named after D.I. Mendeleev. - Moscow: RHTU them. D.I. Mendeleeva, 2006. - p. 310. - 756 p. - ISBN 5-7237-0513-X .
He was buried at the Vagan cemetery in Moscow.