Kermit E. Krantz

Kermit E. Krantz

Kermit Edward Krantz was a surgeon, inventor and faculty member at the University of Kansas Medical Center. He is most known as the co-developer of the Marshall-Marchetti-Krantz (MMK), a medical procedure for stress urinary incontinence which he performed over 5000 times. He served as Chairman of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Kansas.

He was largely credited with desegregating the maternity ward of that hospital in the 1960s.[1]

Personal

Krantz, an identical twin and the youngest of 8 children was born June 4, 1923, in Oak Park, Illinois. He worked his way though school college and medical school performing research, curating a museum for Northwestern University anatomy professor Leslie Arey) and selling newspapers as he lost both of his parents by the age of 13.

Krantz died July 30, 2007 in Kansas City, Kansas from the complications of a stroke.

Academics and Work history

Awards, Honors, Service

Innovation

Beyond the MMK, Krantz held four patents[11] including:

Notes

References

Media related to Kermit E. Krantz at Wikimedia Commons


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