He exuded benevolence and wit, say his friends and colleagues. Stanley Stamm, M.D., founder of the pediatric cardiology department at Seattle Children’s Hospital (formerly Children’s Orthopedic Hospital), passed away in his sleep on March 27, 2018. He was 93.
In Memoriam: Stanley Stamm, M.D.

Dr. Stamm was preceded in death by his wife, Ruth, and his daughter Pamela Stamm McNutt. He is survived by his daughter Leslie Stamm Boyer (Mike Boyer); his son, Andrew Stamm; his grandchildren, Alex (Karen Kinney) McNutt, Nicole (David Toroni) McNutt, Marc (Shaquita Bell) Boyer, Eric Boyer; and his great-grandchild, Zander Stanley McNutt.
Born in Seattle on July 14, 1924, Stanley Stamm went on to meet the love of his life—and future wife—Ruth, at Garfield High School. Soon after he was drafted into World War II, and he eventually served in the Navy. He later obtained his undergraduate degree at Seattle University and went to medical school at St. Louis University in Missouri. After a brief period in private practice, Dr. Stamm joined the staff at Seattle Children’s Hospital and remained there for 57 years.
Known for his stalwart dedication to children, Dr. Stamm started The Stanley Stamm Summer Camp in Pierce County, Washington. Each August, Seattle Children’s Stanley Stamm Summer Camp gives nearly 100 children with chronic medical conditions the chance to go fishing, ride horses and take part in other typical summer camp activities at a week-long sleepover camp near Mt. Rainier.
This summer will be the first camp session without Dr. Stamm. His memorial is scheduled for the day before camp, on August 12 at 5:30 p.m.
Michele Rebert was a close friend of Dr. Stamm. She said, “I had the pleasure of working alongside Dr. Stamm for the past 20 years as the Program Manager at the Seattle Children’s Stanley Stamm Summer Camp.”
“Dr. Stamm was a gentle, kind, honest and loyal man. What comes to mind first is how strong of a family man he was spending all of his free time with the family while also including them in his medical practice and summer camp. His dedication to medicine showed in his daily interactions with patients and families at Seattle Children’s but also connecting with staff on a personal level, doing research and teaching other physicians/clinicians. He enjoyed being active and the outdoors participating in skiing, biking, tennis and swimming to name a few. Dr Stamm has touched an enormous amount of people in a positive way and we are very thankful for that!”
“It’s so hard to describe him in a few sentences. He was my mentor, he protected me, guided me and was my friend! I will miss him forever.”
Those wishing to donate to Dr. Stamm’s camp please visit: https://giveto.seattlechildrens.org/StammCamp50

Discussion
This is a fascinating development. In my practice we've seen similar outcomes with the revised protocol. The key differentiator seems to be patient selection criteria. Has anyone else noticed the correlation with BMI thresholds?
Great point. I'd push back slightly on the conclusion, the sample size in the cited study is too small to draw population-level inferences. That said, the directional signal is compelling and worth a larger RCT.
We implemented a similar approach last year. Early results are promising but we're still gathering 12-month follow-up data. Happy to share our protocol if anyone is interested.
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