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David Klemperer (born 1953 in Berlin) is a German physician.

Biography[edit]

Klemperer studied medicine from 1977 to 1982 in Bonn, Cologne and Düsseldorf. During his further training as an internist, he worked as an assistant doctor in general internal medicine, oncology and cardiology. From 1991 to 2001, he worked in the Bremen Public Health Service, first as head of the Health Office Bremen-North and then as a consultant for questions of planning, organization and evaluation of regional health care in the Bremen Health Authority. During this time he underwent further training to become a specialist in public health care and acquired the additional qualifications of social medicine and environmental medicine. In 2001 he was appointed Professor of Social Medicine and Public Health at the Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Regensburg. In 2019 he became emeritus professor. From 2009 to 2011 he was president of the German Network for Evidence-based Medicine.

The physician Georg Klemperer is his grandfather's brother, as is the Romanist Victor Klemperer. The conductor Otto Klemperer is the brother of his great-grandfather. The former beach volleyball player David Klempereris his nephew.

Work and research priorities[edit]

His research interests include evidence-based professional practice, patient orientation, overuse and underuse of health care services, shared decision making, regional differences in healthcare and conflicts of interest. Klemperer is author of the first German-language publication on evidence-based medicine[1]. His textbook "Sozialmedizin - Public Health - Gesundheitswissenschaften" was published in the 4th edition in 2020[2].

Committees (selection)[edit]

Publications in English language (selection)[edit]

External Links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Klemperer, David. "Qualität und Qualitätskontrolle in der Medizin. in: Damkowsky W, Görres S, Luckey K. Patienten im Gesundheitssystem - Patientenunterstützung und -beratung. Augsburg: Maro-Verl. 1995. S. 189-216" (PDF). Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  2. ^ Klemperer, David. Sozialmedizin – Public Health – Gesundheitswissenschaften. Bern: Hogrefe. ISBN 9783456860169. Retrieved 1 June 2020.