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Dr Allan Colin McDougall FRCP Edin
Born: 13/11/1924;
Died: 16/02/2006
Specialty: Leprosy
MB Edin 1946
MRCP Edin 1951
MD Edin 1958
FRCPS Glasg 1951
FRCP Lond 1979
Fellowship 28.7.1994
Colin McDougall qualified in medicine in Edinburgh in 1946 and was
awarded the Burn-Murdoch Medal in Clinical Medicine. He worked in the
Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford and in
general practice before taking up a post as chest physician in the
Royal Singapore Anti-Tuberculosis Association in Singapore from 1953-56.
On returning to the UK, he pursued post-graduate training in clinical
(internal) medicine in the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, Norwich and
St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London. Opting out of a career in
the National Health Service, he then worked as a medical specialist
in Sumatra and Aden, and with refugees in Algeria, before being appointed
as Leprosy Specialist to the Ministry of Health in Zambia in 1967.
Dr McDougall returned to the UK in 1970, having previously contacted
Dr RJW Rees at the National Institute for Medical Research, about the
possibility of working in clinical or experimental research on leprosy
in the UK. He was taken on with a small salary from LEPRA to see if
anything could be achieved in a reasonable period of time. Thereafter
followed an intensive period of learning and the acquisition of new
knowledge and skills followed, under the able guidance of Graham Weddel
and Dr Douglas Harman in the Leprosy Study Centre, London. The unit
moved into accommodation in the Department of Dermatology, in the Slade
Hospital, Oxford since by that time the beds were no longer being used
for the admission of patients. The task of examining literally thousands
of sections for bacillary and cellular changes due to one disease,
on a day to day basis, and with a considerable element of negative
or normal findings, despite long searches, in much of the material
submitted, was inevitably tedious and repetitive. From the outset,
however, it was mitigated by numerous visits to leprosy-endemic countries
abroad, including Peru, Venezuela, Mexico, Brazil, Africa, India and
the Far East and also by the proximity, in the Science Area of the
University, to departments of basic applied and postgraduate scientific
activity.
After retiring in 1998 Dr McDougall continued to support Leprosy
Review,
having been Editor for ten years from 1978, in revising and sub-editing
manuscripts for possible publication and continued to visit leprosy-endemic
countries abroad, mainly for WHO, to assess progress and advise on
measures to increase case detection, wider implementation of multidrug
therapy and better disability management.
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