Spence Galbraith
Nicol Spence Galbraith (17 March 1927 – 7 August 2008) was a British physician in public health and founding director of the Central Public Health Laboratory Service (PHLS) Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre (CDSC). The results of his efforts were demonstrated in 1978, when he represented the PHLS following the smallpox outbreak in Birmingham. Five years later, he warned the government of possible infected blood products. In 1958, Galbraith joined the Epidemiological Research Laboratory of the Central PHLS, Colindale, which at the time was part of the Medical Research Council (MRC). After five years of working with vaccine trials, polio vaccine safety, and monitoring of foodborne disease, he was appointed deputy medical officer of health for Newham, East London, and in 1974 became the area medical officer. In 1976, he re-joined the PHLS and as director of the CDSC, set up teaching courses for NHS epidemiologists, and improved surveillance programmes in infectious disease. In 1991, Galbraith was awarded the Jenner Medal of the Royal Society of Medicine, and in 1994, he delivered the John Snow Society's Pumphandle Lecture. Early life and educationNicol Spence Galbraith was born in Southborough, Kent, on 17 March 1927, to Samuel Nicol Galbraith, the then medical officer of health for south west Kent.[1] He completed his early education at Tonbridge School, before gaining a place at London University to study medicine, and subsequently qualified in 1950 from Guy's Hospital.[1][2] Early careerGalbraith completed house officer posts at Lewisham Hospital and Guy's.[1] In 1952, he enlisted with the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) to do his National Service.[1] The following year, he was posted to Egypt, where he served as deputy assistant director of army health, based at the Suez Canal zone.[1][2] There, he had to attend to a paratyphoid B fever outbreak.[1][2] In 1954, he gained the diploma in public health after completing studies at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM).[1][3] In 1958, after four years of house jobs at Brook General Hospital and the Lewisham Hospital, Galbraith joined the Epidemiological Research Laboratory of the Central Public Health Laboratory Service (PHLS), Colindale, which at the time was part of the Medical Research Council (MRC).[1][2] He remained there as an epidemiologist for five years.[2] There, his work involved looking at vaccine trials, polio vaccine safety, and monitoring of foodborne disease.[1] In 1963, he was appointed deputy medical officer of health for Newham, East London. The following year, he made his first call for a national epidemiological service that would be centrally co-ordinated.[2] In 1974, he became the area medical officer of the City and East London Area Health Authority.[1][2][a] During that time, he continued work on polio and BCG vaccines, and called for a centrally funded co-ordinated national epidemiological service, based on the American Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). He had previously first published on the case in 1968, in an article titled "Epidemiology and the Green Paper – a National Epidemiological Service".[1][5][6] Later careerIn 1976, Galbraith re-joined the PHLS after being asked to establish a national unit that could report and control communicable disease.[1][5] The following year, he became the founding director of the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre (CDSC).[7] It consisted of Galbraith, one other medical officer and a secretary.[7] Administered by the Central Public Health Laboratory Service (PHLS), he chose the Broad Street pump as its logo.[2][8] That year, he visited Alexander Langmuir at the CDC in Atlanta and subsequently began expanding the CDSC.[5][9] As director of the CDSC, he set up teaching courses for NHS epidemiologists, and improved surveillance programmes in infectious disease.[1] The weekly bulletin was his creation.[10] At the same time, he lectured at St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School and at the LSHTM.[1] 1978 smallpox outbreak in BirminghamThe results of Galbraith's successful efforts as director of the CDSC were demonstrated in 1978, when he represented the PHLS following the smallpox outbreak in Birmingham, attending the initial meeting at Birmingham area Health Authority's headquarters along with Alasdair Geddes, Surinder S. Bakhshi, William Nicol, and Henry Bedson.[11][12] To assist at a local level, he transferred a few epidemiologists to Birmingham and confirmed that testing would be done at the Colindale laboratory.[10][11] In 1981, he was unsuccessful in his call for a local surveillance system that would include a clinical epidemiologist.[7][10] Contaminated blood scandalOn 9 May 1983, after reviewing literature revealing that 11 cases of AIDS in the United States, three in Spain, and one in Wales, were detected in people who had received American Factor VIII, Galbraith wrote to Ian Field of the UK Department of Health and Social Security, and suggested to withdraw products made in the US from blood donated after 1978:[13][14]
The paper Galbraith submitted on the matter was considered and rejected at a meeting of the biological sub-committee of the Committee on Safety of Medicines on 13 July 1983.[13] OtherIn 1986, Galbraith contributed to the founding of the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit, which functioned to detect new diseases in children.[2] A vaccine advocate, he developed a way to examine risks of live polio vaccine, and was able to show the safety and efficacy of giving the BCG, diphtheria-tetanus, and oral polio vaccines at the same time.[2] At the CDSC, he created an immunisation department for monitoring vaccine safety, efficacy, and coverage.[2] Awards and honoursFor his efforts as area medical officer in East London, Galbraith was made Freedom of the City of London in 1976.[1] As president of the Epidemiology and Community Medicine Section of the Royal Society of Medicine (RSM), he delivered his presidential address in 1980.[1][16] In 1991, he was awarded the RSM's Jenner Medal.[1] In 1994, he delivered the John Snow Society's Pumphandle Lecture on the life of John Snow, titled "Dr John Snow – Early Life and Later Triumphs. An exploration of Snow’s work from the epidemiological perspective".[8][17] Personal and familyGalbraith married Zina-Mary née Cullingworth Flood, in 1952. They had three daughters.[1] At a young age, due to severe rheumatoid arthritis, he had two hip replacements.[2] DeathGalbraith died on 7 August 2008, following a heart attack.[2] Selected publicationsArticles
Books
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