
Lives of Consequence
Dr. Robert Demuth '51
Surgeon
Dr. Robert Demuth '51 has traveled to 28 different countries performing plastic surgeries for those without access to reliable healthcare. Demuth's career has been distinguished by nearly 40 years of dedication to impoverished individuals throughout the world.
At Hobart, Demuth majored in chemistry and was a talented athlete, and a member of both the lacrosse and basketball teams, captaining the lacrosse team through some of its most successful years.
Following graduation in 1951, Demuth joined the U.S. Navy. He spent three years on the ocean during the Korean War as a lieutenant and chief engineer.
In March of 1955, Demuth was accepted to the University of Rochester, thanks in part to a recommendation from Theodore Tellefsen Odell '20, and entered the university's medical program in the fall of 1955. Upon graduation from medical school, Demuth entered into a two-year internship at the University of Rochester with a plastic surgeon, and soon after served five years in general surgery at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Hospital.
In 1966, Demuth and his family moved to Erie, Pa., where he started his own practice. In the summer of 1973, Demuth began his long career in international service with a volunteer trip on the SS Hope in Brazil where he performed daily reconstructive surgeries.
He left his practice in 1977 to pursue a career in academia as an associate professor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School. During his four years in Dallas, Demuth also served as staff surgeon at Parkland Hospital Center, Baylor Medical Center, and the Children's Medical Center.
Demuth was invited to join the faculty at the University of Oregon in 1979. While teaching a full course load, he also helped to found the school's plastic surgery program and continued to run it until he left the university in 1991.
While in Portland, Demuth joined Northwest Medical Teams, now known as Medical Teams International, traveling numerous times to Mexico and Romania with a team and as a primary consultant to perform surgeries on those with no access to healthcare.
Demuth also served as a consultant to Smile Train, an international organization providing cleft palate surgery to those in need, in Hungary and Bulgaria. With Surgical Aid to Children of the World, he performed surgeries on impoverished people living in Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria, and with Rotoplast, a project of Rotarians seeking to join medical and non-medical volunteers to provide resources and volunteer services, Demuth operated on patients on every continent except Antarctica and Australia.
For the past 15 years, Demuth has made numerous trips to Chile, where he has worked tirelessly to form multi-disciplinary committees to work with cleft palate patients. Following a cleft palate procedure, children need intensive follow-up appointments with pathologists, audiologists and dentists. Demuth believes that above all, quality care must be provided to patients who lack the resources for such important services. Demuth made his last trip to Chile in February of 2012 at the age of 82.
Demuth remains an active member of the East Portland Rotary Club, which he joined in 1984. From 1989 to 1993, Demuth served on the Hobart and William Smith Board of Trustees. He has also served as president of the American Association for Hand Surgery. In 2006, Demuth was inducted into the Hobart College Athletics Hall of Fame.
