José Quiroga (cardiologist)

José Quiroga Fuentealba is a cardiologist who served as a physician to Chilean president Salvador Allende. During the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, Quiroga witnessed the Chilean Army assault the government palace. He was detained and beaten until his release was ordered by a Chilean military general.

Career
In 1977, Quiroga secured a position at UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and moved his family to Santa Monica, California. He volunteered to treat torture victims at UCLA and the Venice Family Clinic for the next twenty-five years. In 1980, Quiroga co-founded the Program for Torture Victims with Argentine refugee psychologist Ana Deutsch. He has spoken about his work at conferences and universities worldwide.

Quiroga was the former vice president and member of the executive committee of the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRCT) in Copenhagen. He also serves as treasurer of Physicians for Social Responsibility and was a former medical director of the Program for Torture Victims. He received the 2009 Socially Responsible Medicine Award from Physicians for Social Responsibility in recognition of his professional career and social commitment. Quiroga was awarded the Inge Genefke Award in 2012 alongside his peer Jim Jaranson. The award is given every other year by the Anti-Torture Support Foundation to honor outstanding work in the global fight against torture. The official award ceremony took place in November 2012 at the board meeting of the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims.

For his work on the human rights of refugees, Quiroga has received press coverage from the Los Angeles Times Magazine the New South Wales Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors' Refugee Transitions. In an interview with the Hungarian journal Élet és Irodalom, he further commented on his founding of the Program for Torture Victims and how its relationships with the IRCT drew closer following the Balkan Wars.

The Hoover Institution Interview
On June 30-31, 2007 Brad Bauer, associate archivist for collection development at the Hoover Institution Archives of Stanford University, conducted a 6.75 hours interview with José Quiroga. The interview, in six separated segments, covers subjects as Quiroga's biography (starting in the first third of XX Century in Chile), his role in Salvador Allende's government and having witnessed Allende's last hours in La Moneda, and his long-term work to document and treat victims of torture from Chile and the world.

Co-author

 * ——; Lira, Elizabeth (2022). “The military coup in Chile in 1973, the immediate reaction of international organisations, and the founding of the first rehabilitation program for torture victims in 1977”. Torture. 32 (1–2): 113–132.
 * ——; Deutsch, Ana (2023). “Medico-Legal Evaluation of Torture Victims in the USA before the Istanbul Protocol”. Torture. 33 (2):151–56.
 * ——; Lira, Elizabeth (2022). “The military coup in Chile in 1973, the immediate reaction of international organisations, and the founding of the first rehabilitation program for torture victims in 1977”. Torture. 32 (1–2): 113–132.
 * ——; Deutsch, Ana (2023). “Medico-Legal Evaluation of Torture Victims in the USA before the Istanbul Protocol”. Torture. 33 (2):151–56.
 * ——; Lira, Elizabeth (2022). “The military coup in Chile in 1973, the immediate reaction of international organisations, and the founding of the first rehabilitation program for torture victims in 1977”. Torture. 32 (1–2): 113–132.
 * ——; Deutsch, Ana (2023). “Medico-Legal Evaluation of Torture Victims in the USA before the Istanbul Protocol”. Torture. 33 (2):151–56.