Home >
Departments >
Facilities Planning & Design >
Campus Info >
Building Profiles >
South Campus Building Profiles >
Farber Hall Annex
Farber Hall Annex
 |
|
|
Facility:
Number:
Function:
Gross Square Feet:
Construction Cost:
Completed:
Architect:
|
FARB_A
0069
Academic
5,751
$279,000
September, 1966
Butler, Inc.
|
OCCUPANTS
Farber Hall Annex Occupany Report 
FUNCTION
Study area for Medical School students.
NAMESAKE
Sidney Farber (1903-1973) born in Buffalo, was a UB graduate in 1923 who later served as a faculty member at Harvard Medical School, regarded as one of the founders of the speciality of pediatric pathology. The Clinical Trials Cooperative Group Program was conceived in 1955 when Dr. Sidney Farber, Mary Lasker, and others approached Congress with a proposal that it increase support for studies of chemotherapy for cancer. In the area of clinical care, one of Farber's innovations was something that sounds as if it could have come out of today's headlines. "He came up with the idea of what is now called 'total care'. He decided that all services for the patient and family - clinical care, nutrition, social work, counseling - should be provided in one place. All decisions should be made as a team. Everyone involved in caregiving should plan the treatment together." says former Institute President David G. Nathan, M.D.