Owen Wade (physician)
Owen Lyndon Wade CBE FRCP (1921-2008) was a British medical researcher and academic, described by the Royal College of Physicians as "one of the founding fathers of clinical pharmacology and therapeutics in the UK".[1] Wade was born in Penarth, South Wales, on 17 May 1921, to Katie Jones and James Owen David Wade, the latter a surgeon.[1] He was educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge and University College, London,[1] and subsequently worked as a clinical assistant at the Pneumoconiosis Research Unit from 1948 to 1951.[2] He was pointed as a lecturer in medicine at the University of Birmingham in 1951, rising to Senior Lecturer.[2] In 1957, he became Whitla Professor of Therapeutics and Pharmacology at Queen's University, Belfast.[2] In 1971 he returned to Birmingham, in the post of Professor of Therapeutics and Clinical Pharmacology, from which he retired in 1986.[2] He was also dean of Birmingham Medical School from 1978 to 1984.[2] Immediately on appointment he had to deal with the aftermath of a smallpox outbreak there.[1] He oversaw the modernisation and 1981 relaunch of the British National Formulary.[3] Wade's autobiography was published in 1986.[2] He was a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians (FRCP) and was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1983 Birthday Honours.[4] He died on 10 December 2008.[1] Bibliography
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