Maude Elizabeth Seymour Babin was born in St. Andrews East, on 18 March 1868.[4] Both of her parents were absent during infancy,[5] as her mother had died of tuberculosis when Abbott was 7 months old and her father had abandoned her and her older sister, Alice.[2][4][3] The two sisters were legally adopted and raised by their maternal grandmother, Mrs. William Abbott, who was then 62.[5][6] She was a cousin of John Abbott, Canada's third Prime Minister.[7]
Abbott was home schooled until she was 15 years old. In 1885, she graduated from a private Montreal seminary high school.[6][7]
Abbott was admitted to McGill University's Faculty of Arts, with a scholarship, even though she had previously been rejected,[7][8] and received her BA in 1890, graduating as class valedictorian and receiving the Lord Stanley Gold Medal.[3] She subsequently applied to study medicine at McGill University. Admission was refused despite petitioning the faculty first privately and then publicly as the medical school administration was adamant in their refusal to accept a woman. She was then accepted into medical school at Bishop's University and while there, was able to undertake clinical training at the Montreal General Hospital alongside medical students from McGill.[4] In 1894, she received her M.D., C.M. with honours, and the only woman in her class. She received the Chancellor's Prize, and Senior Anatomy Prize for having the best final examination.[9]
Career
Later in 1894, she opened her own practice in Montreal, worked with the Royal Victoria hospital, and was nominated and elected as the Montreal Medico-Chirurgical Society's first female member.[6] Some time afterwards, she did her post-graduate medical studies in Vienna.[7][10]
In 1897, she opened an independent clinic dedicated to treating women and children. There, she did much first-hand research in pathology.[5] Much of Abbott's work concerned the nature of heart disease, especially in newborn babies.[7] This would cause her to be recognized as a world authority on heart defects.[10]
In 1905,[6] she was invited to write the chapter on "Congenital Heart Disease" for William Osler's System of Modern Medicine.[7] He declared it "the best thing he had ever read on the subject."[11] The article would place her as the world authority in the field of congenital heart disease.[6]
In 1906, she co-founded the International Association of Medical Museums, with Osler.[2] She became its international secretary in 1907. She would edit the institutions articles for thirty-one years (1907-1938).[11]
In 1910, Abbott was awarded an honorary medical degree from McGill and was made a lecturer in Pathology; this was eight years prior to the university admitting female students to the Faculty of Medicine.[7] After a much conflict with Dr. Horst Oërtel, she left McGill to take up a position at the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1923.[12] In 1925, Abbott returned to McGill becoming an Assistant Professor.[4]
In 1924, she was a founder of the Federation of Medical Women of Canada, a Canadian organization committed to the professional, social and personal advancement of women physicians.[2]
In 1936, she wrote the Atlas of Congenital Cardiac Disease.[2] The work illustrated a new classification system and described records of over a thousand cases of clinical and postmortem records.[6] The same year she retired from her professorial position.
Abbott was a prolific writer, composing over 140 papers and books.[Note 2] She also gave countless lectures.
In 1943, Diego Rivera painted her in his mural for the National Institute of Cardiology of Mexico City. She was the only Canadian, and the only woman depicted in the work.[6]
In 1993, she was named a "Historic Person" by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada[3] and a plaque was erected outside the McIntyre Medical Sciences Building at McGill University in Montreal.[13]
In 1994, she was posthumously inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame.[14] In 2000, a bronze plaque was erected in her honour on the McIntyre Medical Building. In the same year, Canada Post issued a forty-six cent postage stamp entitled The Heart of the Matter in her honour.[9]
McGill University Health Centre has also recognized Abbott by naming their congenital heart defect clinic the “Maude Clinic”. The clinic has carried her name proudly for many years - originally at the Royal Victoria Hospital site and now continuing at the new M.U.H.C. Glen site.
The Atlas of Congenital Cardiac Disease (Originally published in New York by the American Heart Association in 1936. A reprint was published by McGill-Queen's University Press in 2006 in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the founding of the International Academy of Pathology." (ISBN9780773531284)
Abbott, Maude (1908). "IX: Congenital cardiac disease". In Osler, William (ed.). Modern Medicine: Its Theory and Practice. Vol. IV: Diseases of the circulatory system, diseases of the blood, diseases of the spleen, thymus, and lymph-glands. Philadelphia and New York: Lea & Febiger.
^ ab"Dr. Maude Abbott". Canadian Medical Hall of Fame. Canada Medical Association. Archived from the original on July 13, 2015. Retrieved July 12, 2015.
^"Maude Abbott". MAUDE Unit. 2007. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
Further reading
Abbott, Elizabeth (1997). All Heart: Notes on the Life of Dr. Maude Elizabeth Seymour Abbott MD, Pioneer Woman Doctor and Cardiologist. E. Abbott. ISBN978-0-92137-010-9.