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Krabill, Willard S. (1926-2009)
Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 2009 Jan 12 p. 12
Birth date: 1926
text of obituary:
Krabill helped church confront issues of medical ethics
By goshen College staff
GOSHEN, Ind. — Willard S. Krabill, Goshen College physician emeritus and associate professor emeritus of health education, who gave 24 years of service to the college, died Jan. 6 after a six-month battle with cancer. He was 82.
Krabill was a pioneer in the areas of medical ethics, public health, family-centered childbirth and sex education.
He worked as a consultant for Mennonite Mutual Aid and helped the church community confront issues like sexuality, abortion and medical ethics. He was a key figure in the production of the congregational study book, Medical Ethics, Human Choices, and wrote a column for Mennonite Weekly Review for 10 years. He was passionate about the need for universal health care for everyone in the country.
"Dr. Krabill's death is a loss not only for his family and the Goshen College community, but also for Elkhart County and the many patients, physicians and nurses whose lives were enriched by his leadership and many contributions," said Goshen President James E. Brenneman.
Krabill expanded the College Health Services, was instrumental in creating a health plan for college employees, worked faithfully to promote health and sexuality education and disease prevention, and brought his healing touch to students who visited the Health Center.
In 1974, Krabill started a human sexuality class to emphasize the holistic nature of sexuality, encouraging students to see sexuality in the context of their whole lives and enabling them to discuss it comfortably. When he retired in 1991, it was the most popular class on campus.
Henry D. Weaver, provost emeritus and professor emeritus of chemistry, remembered Krabill as a creative leader.
"Dr. Krabill was always a step ahead of the crowd, whether it was helping to design an employee's health plan for Goshen College before such plans or HMOs were common or his innovative teaching," Weaver said.
Krabill assisted in the delivery of 2,730 babies and led the movement in Goshen to make birthing a family experience. Long before it was common nationwide, he urged Goshen General hospital to bring fathers into the delivery rooms and allow babies to remain in the same rooms with their mothers, a practice the hospital began in 1969.