Frederick Wolfe, M.D.

frederick wolfe, m.d.
Frederick Wolfe, M.D., 87, of Wichita KS, died September 5, 2023.Fred was born July 1, 1936 to Michael and Helen Wolfe in the Bronx, New York, NY.Fred graduated from Queens College, NY in 1958. He then earned a degree of medicine in 1966 from The State University of New York.In 1965, Fred married Ilsa Klotzman and later divorced in 1984. Together they had 3 children. Fred remarried to Donna Hawley in 1986 to whom he remained married for the rest of his life.Fred was an enthusiastic cyclist, and as a member of the Oz Bicycle Club, he participated in Bicycling Across Kansas many times. He also rode over the continental divide and toured several states. He had many passions including amateur radio, cooking and gardening.Fred had a distinguished professional career. He joined the US Air Force in 1968 and was honorably discharged as a captain in 1970. He founded the Wichita Arthritis Center in 1974, and in 1979 became a clinical professor of internal medicine at the University of Kansas.At the Wichita Arthritis Center he began a long career in rheumatology clinical research with the founding of the Arthritis Research Center Foundation and the National Databank for Rheumatic Diseases. There, he became an early adopter of computerized medical records and collected large volumes of patient data from his clinic and others. He used that data for rheumatology clinical research, and he was the lead or co-author on hundreds of peer-reviewed research papers, which have been cited by other scholars more than 125,000 times. Fred was one of the first doctors to define the cluster of symptoms known as fibromyalgia. In 1987, he brought together 20 rheumatologists to codify the disorder. The American College of Rheumatology endorsed their criteria and fibromyalgia became an officially recognized disease. His research into fibromyalgia continued until his death. The common denominator of all of Fred's work was his passion to make the world better for all his patients and everyone with whom he came in contact. His exacting standards sometimes led to difficult interactions, but these were never based on personal issues but rather on how best to meet the goal of delivering optimal patient care and outcomes. His contributions resound throughout the world, and he will be sorely missed by patients and the community of rheumatologists to whom he contributed so many advances. Fred is survived by his wife, Donna; his sister, Susan Sanders and her husband, Fredric Sanders; his children, Aaron Wolfe, Ezra Wolfe, and David Wolfe; daughter-in-laws, Terrilyn McCormick and Erica Wolfe; and 5 grandchildren, Cy Wolfe, Allison Wolfe, Oscar Wolfe, Amos Wolfe and Lennard Wolfe.A service will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Sweet Emergency Fund, 1010 N Kansas, Ste 3034, Wichita, KS 67214.Services in care of Downing & Lahey East Mortuary.

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  1. My mom had severe rheumatoid arthritis and became a patient of Dr. Wolfe’s in 1975. She sang her praises of him until her passing in 1977. Through his care, she was able to enjoy a quality of life that she hadn’t experienced in many years.
    My sincere condolences to his family. May you find comfort and peace in the knowledge that he touched many lives in a positive manner.

  2. Rest Dr. Frederick, until you hear at dawn, the low, clear reveille of God. Thank you for your service to this nation. U.S. Air Force. Captain.

  3. Dr. Fred Wolfe was a legend in the field of rheumatology and motivated me to be a better physician and be more stringent in assessment of outcomes. He supported our practice in data collection and with his own brand of exhortation. While under-appreciated in the community, the mention of his name at a national meeting will make evident the respect he had in the field of rheumatology. I will personally miss Fred as a colleague and friend.

  4. My first contact with Fred was on January 22, 2010, when I received his email with a heading in German: “Unsere Zeit wird kommen” In English: “Our time will come”. He commented positively on a paper of our group in J Rheumatol in which we demonstrated that fibromyalgia can be understood as the extreme end of a continuum of biopsychosocial stress. This email was the starting point of a productive scientific collaboration commenting on and exchanging US and German data. We did not always agree but after a lot of versions of a paper we found a compromise. Fred used to set very tight deadlines for an answer. Frankly spoken – sometimes I did not understand all of his sophisticated statistical analyses. But we did not only share interests in FMS. We shared the compassion of bicycle racing. I have sent photos of my trips in Europe to Fred. Dona and Fred visited us in 2012 in our home after his lecture at the congress of the German Rheumatology Association. We have exchanged our experiences with gardening. In the last two years he shared a bit of his increasing health problems and his experiences with the US healthcare system – everybody who knows him can imagine that he gave a critical view. Fred- your time (on earth) is over. I will miss you.

  5. In 1974, I sold Dr. Wolfe a Wang 2200 Computer System. I suggested a couple of programmers to assist him..he said “it can’t be that hard..I’ll do it myself”. He was a brilliant man..I truly enjoyed our conversations in those days and imagine that system was the start of his clinical research project(s). The world is a better place because of Dr. Wolfe!


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