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Wilson Jameson

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Name
  
Wilson Jameson


Died
  
1962

Wilson Jameson

Books
  
On the State of the Public Health During Six Years of War: Report of the Chief Medical Officer of the Ministry of Health

Sir (William) Wilson Jameson (12 May 1885 – 18 October 1962) was a Scottish medical doctor and the ninth Chief Medical Officer of England 1940 - 1950.

Jameson was born in Perth, Scotland and educated in Aberdeen. He moved to London before the First World War and was appointed as Medical Officer of Health in Finchley and St Marylebone in 1920. He also trained in law and was called to the Bar in 1922. He was appointed Dean of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in 1931.

He introduced much more public health information than had been seen before and was not afraid to tackle sensitive subjects such as venereal disease, the subject of a BBC broadcast in October 1942.

He was influential in the detailed planning for the introduction of the National Health Service where he worked closely with Aneurin Bevan. Subsequently, healthcare services came to be the main focus of the work of the Chief Medical Officer, rather than public health.

After retirement in 1950 he became medical adviser to the King Edward's Hospital Fund for London.

In 1952 Jameson chaired the Second British National Conference on Social Work, which was held in London.

References

Wilson Jameson Wikipedia


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