PROFILE A Lot Of Serendipity Beaumont Children's Hospital physician-in-chief eyes growth of staff. Ilene Wolff Special to the Jewish News T o some, Serendipity is an ice cream shop in Manhattan. To others, it's a 2001 movie. But for Dr. Jeffrey Maisels, it was a career starter. Maisels was a 30-year-old postgraduate fellow in 1967 at Harvard Medical School when he and the fellowship director met to pick a research project for him. "I thought I might like to do something on nutrition," the young pediatric neona- tologist told his director. Unfortunately, there was no faculty member to sponsor and oversee research on nutrition. "How about jaundice?" asked the director. Thirty-two years later, Maisels is a world-renowned specialist in jaundice in neonates (newborns). He's also physician-in-chief of Beaumont Children's Hospital and medi- cal director of pediatric services for Royal Oak-based Beaumont Hospitals. He will chair the department of pediatrics at the new Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine. He previ- ously completed military service at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington and served on the faculty of the Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine in Hershey, Pa. Maisels is leading a study on a drug to block production of bilirubin, a substance in the body that can lead to jaundice. He designed a method for measuring the rate of carbon monoxide production in new- borns and has done extensive studies on a technique for measuring bilirubin in the skin — two important steps in diagnosing jaundice. He has lectured on the topic of neonatal jaundice to other medical professionals around the world. He recently published a book on the subject and has been pub- lished in top-of-the-line medical jour- nals such as the New England Journal of Medicine and Pediatrics (on whose edito- rial board he serves). A Serendipitous Life Maisels smiles at the recollection of his meeting with the fellowship director and the seemingly random nature of one's path in life. "It's a lot of serendipity," he says. What was not serendipitous for Maisels was his decision to leave his birthplace of Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1965. "It was the peak of apartheid," he says. His family was solidly anti-apartheid. In fact, his attorney father, Israel Aaron Maisels, successfully defended Nelson Mandela and 156 other defendants in South Africa's notorious Treason Trial, which ended in 1961. Mandela was subse- quently imprisoned on other charges. His father is an obvious source of pride for Maisels, who reaches into his desk drawer during an interview to pull out a folder con- taining news clips and a copy of a handwrit- ten letter from Mandela to the elder Maisels. "I am very proud of him," says Maisels. "He was a wonderful many" The elder Maisels had a long-lived career defending clients and as a judge. He retired a week after his 87th birthday. Stephanie Bauer, R.N., takes the temperature of an infant in the neona- tal intensive care unit at Boon To The Pediatric Unit Beaumont Longtime careers seem to run in the Maisels family. Beaumont's Maisels is 71. He's been chair- man of pediatrics at the Royal Oak hospital since 1986 and shows no indication of hang- ing up his lab coat any time soon. "He's very good with the families, very gracious:' says Ellen Sneider, R.N., admin- istrative nurse manager of the pediatric and pediatric intensive care units. "He's also always been very supportive of things we've done on the unit." Maisels, a longtime member of Beaumont's Art Committee, was instrumen- tal, with his wife, Carol, in getting much of the colorful artwork on the pediatric unit. Recently, he was appointed the top doctor for Beaumont Children's Hospital, overseeing more than 200 pediatricians Hospital, Royal Oak, as Jeffrey Maisels, M.D., watches. in 36 medical and surgical subspecialties and 112 hospital beds for children. It was under his leadership that Beaumont was accepted for membership by the National Association of Children's Hospitals and Related Institutions in 2008 as a "children's hospital within a hospital." "He put the pieces together — sub- specialists, systems, etc. — to bring this to fruition:' says Michael Rolnick, Ph.D., Name: M. Jeffrey Maisels, M.D. Home: Bloomfield Hills Family: Wife, Carol; daughters, Lisa (deceased), Gabrielle and Amanda; son, James Synagogue: Adat Shalom Synagogue, Farmington Hills Military Service: Lt. Col., Army Medical Corps Honors: Douglas K. Richardson Award, Society for Pediatric Research for lifetime contributions to pediat- ric research; Virginia Apgar Award, Perinatal Section, American Academy of Pediatrics Hobbies: nationally ranked squash player in South Africa; Michigan state squash champion in 50 and 55+ categories; runnerup in U.S. national squash championships in 65+ category; collecting art; cantorial music; guitar and piano director of speech and language pathology for Beaumont Hospitals. Beaumont Children's Hospital will be the primary pediatric teaching hospital of the Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine. "I'd like to stay long enough to see the first class of medical students come to Beaumont:' says Maisels. The students will spend their third and fourth years of medical school at Beaumont after completing two years of classroom work at Oakland University. He would also like to increase the pedi- atric staff for the children's hospital; he dreams of having more money and space to do so. He would focus on recruiting hard-to-find pediatric sub-specialists in gastroenterology, endocrinology, rheuma- tology and nephrology. "It needs to grow:' Maisels says. "You can't stay static." ❑ Ilene Wolff is a media relations specialist and Web editor with Royal Oak-based Beaumont Hospitals. June 25 2009 C19