Cule was a Welsh physician who worked as a general practitioner and later as a psychiatrist. In 2005, he was awarded a MBE for his work in mental health in West Wales.[11] He was nominated an honorary member of the SSHM at the 38th congress held in 1986 at Edinburgh.[12]
Adams is a retired consultant anaesthetist. She worked at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, with a focus on ophthalmic and neuroanaesthesia. In 1985, she was Dean of the Faculty of Anaesthetists of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. In 1993, she was Hunterian professor in the Royal College of Surgeons and has been a president of the History of Anaesthesia Society. She has also been president of the section of anaesthetics and section of the history of medicine, both at the Royal Society of Medicine.[18][19]
2005
John Ward[citation needed]
2005-2015[]
2007
David Wright
Wright is a retired consultant anaesthetist who was also elected the president of the Scottish Society of the History of Medicine in 2001 and has been editor of the International Society for the History of Medicine's journal .[14][20]
Thomas is a retired radiologist who became interested in the history of radiology when he was a registrar at Hammersmith Hospital. He has been a visiting professor at Canterbury Christ Church University, president of the Radiology Section of the Royal Society of Medicine and honorary historian to the British Institute of Radiology.[22][23]
Surgeon to the Queen in Scotland until his retirement in 2004, Macintyre graduated in medicine from Edinburgh University and stayed in Edinburgh throughout his surgical career. During the 500th anniversary celebration of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, he was its Vice President.[26]
A graduate of Galway University, Collins worked as a consultant radiologist in Sheffield until his retirement.[28] His history of medicine interests include the early use of X-Rays, the First World War, Sir William Wilde and lead poisoning.[29]
^Berridge, Virginia (1990). "4. Health and Medicine". In Thompson, F. M. L. (ed.). The Cambridge Social History of Britain, 1750-1950. Cambridge University Press. p. 171. ISBN0521438144.
^‘Guthrie, Douglas James’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 12 Sept 2013
^Dr Douglas Guthrie A distinguished medical historian (Obituaries) The Times Tuesday, 10 June 1975; pg. 18; Issue 59418.
^Hargreaves, Anne S.; Lazenby, Elizabeth; Gardner-Medwin, David; Pybus Society for the History and Bibliography of Medicine; British Society for the History of Medicine, eds. (1993). Medicine in Northumbria: essays on the history of medicine in the north east of England. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: The Pybus Society for the History and Bibliography of Medicine. ISBN9780952209706. OCLC29399334.
^Ford, John M.T.; Ward, John W.K. "Denis Dunbar Gibbs". munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk. Royal College of Physicians. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
^Aileen K. Adams interview. Interview with Dr Max Blythe, recorded in 1996, held in Oxford Brookes' Medical Sciences Video Archive catalogue number MSVA142–3