Jaime Zipper (20 January 1926 â 16 March 2011) was a Chilean physician and scientist who, with American Howard Tatum, created the first T-shaped copper intrauterine device. Zipper discovered the contraceptive properties of intrauterine copper.
The child of Polish Jews Gustavo Zipper and Juana Antonia Abragan, Jaime Zipper was born in Lviv, Ukraine. The family moved to Mulchén, Chile, and then to Santiago.
He studied at the Liceo José Victorino Lastarria and subsequently completed his secondary education at the Internado Nacional Barros Arana. From an early age, Zipper showed a deep interest in science, and went on to study medicine at the Universidad de Chile. He earned his doctoral degree in 1953 with a thesis entitled "Contribución al estudio de la Hidatidosis en Chile" (). In his final three years of study, he was an assistant professor of parasitology.
Between 1961 and 1962, he was a postdoctoral researcher in reproductive physiology at the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology in the United States. There, he worked with Gregory Goodwin Pincus, the developer of the first oral contraceptive pill.
In 1963, he became associate professor of physiology in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics at the University of Chile. Between 1967 and 1969 he served as the medical head of the Department of Human Reproduction of the World Health Organization in Switzerland, and he remained a professor during that time. In 1981 he was awarded tenure as a full professor of physiology, and in 2004 he was named professor emeritus at the University of Chile.
In 1959, Zipper introduced the first IUD made in Chile, dubbed the Zipper ring. It was made of a nylon monofilament, and was implemented in maternity hospitals for underserved populations, notably the Hospital Barros Luco. He investigated older devices, such as the Gräfenberg ring, made with a copper-nickel-zinc alloy (nickel silver), whose efficacy was erroneously attributed to metal in general, not copper. Zipper concluded that the spermicidal activity of the device was related to the percentage of copper in the alloy, and worked with international colleagues, notably the Americans Jack Lippes and Howard Tatum, to develop a more effective IUD. In 1970, based on his research, he introduced a T shaped device made with copper, a design that persists in many modern copper IUDs.
Zipper also was known for his research into a technique for permanent sterilization using a small dose of quinacrine delivered transcervically.
Zipper died in the morning of March 16, 2011 of complications due to Parkinson's disease. He was recognized for his contributions to global health in reducing maternal mortality due to unintended pregnancy and unsafe abortion.