Records
Crofton
J (2006). John Crofton (1912-).The
James Lind Library
(www.jameslindlibrary.org). Accessed
© John Crofton, 2006.
JOHN CROFTON
[Autobiographical
details provided for The James Lind Library, September 2004].
Born 27 March 1912, in Dublin, Ireland.
Most schooling in England.
Medical education at Cambridge University and St Thomas’s Hospital
Medical School, London. Qualified MB ChB in 1937.
1937-1939: Junior posts at St Thomas’s
Hospital. Admitted to Membership of the Royal College of Physicians.
1939-1945: Medical specialist in the
Royal Army Medical Corps, with service in France, Egypt, Eritrea, Greece,
Malta and Germany.
1947-1952: Half-time Medical Research
Council Research Fellow in charge of first streptomycin trials at the
Brompton Hospital, London, and half-time lecturer (later senior lecturer)
at (Royal) Postgraduate School of Medicine of London at Hammersmith Hospital.
1952-1977: Professor of Respiratory Diseases
and Tuberculosis, Edinburgh University.
1977 onwards: Many post-‘retirement’
activities (see below)
Research on tuberculosis, 1947-1960
Big postwar tuberculosis epidemic in Scotland. Became responsible in
1952 for 400 tuberculosis beds and 30 non-tuberculosis beds in Edinburgh.
Other consultants shortly appointed (Ian Grant, Norman Horne, Ian Ross,
Jimmy Williamson). Our group participated in subsequent MRC tuberculosis
trials but, through the Tuberculosis Society of Scotland (later Scottish
Thoracic Society) we initiated controlled trials of treatment at work
versus bedrest; preventive chemotherapy for tuberculosis of doubtful activity;
corticosteroids plus chemotherapy in pulmonary tuberculosis; and variable
dosage of isoniazid in pulmonary tuberculosis (all world firsts).
Our major tuberculosis research identified the causes of failed drug
treatment, which was due to drug-resistance resulting from bad or risky
therapy, or failed adherenece to therapy. We found triple drug treatment
uniformly successful in new patients, and were the first team to claim
that 100% treatment success was possible.
As result of widespread disbelief in this claim, we initiated, with Noel
Rist of Pasteur Insitute Paris and through the International Union Against
Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (IUATLD), a 23-country trial of “causes
of failure in advanced pulmonary tuberculosis” (1963) using triple
chemotherapy. (I believe this may have been the first international collaborative
trial of therapy in any disease. The study was coordinated by Reg Bignall
of the Brompton Hospital). Treatment failures were virtually all due to
participating doctors breaking the treatment protocol.
Also, through chairmanship of IUATLD Scientific Committees: first international
study of drug resistance prevalence; international trial of reliability
of X-ray diagnosis (which was poor) and sputum diagnosis (which was more
reliable).
Research on respiratory diseases other than tuberculosis
As tuberculosis beds were converted to care and investigation of patients
with other respiratory diseases, studied causes of pneumonia in the community,
first at Postgraduate Medical School in London, then in Edinburgh; treatment
and long-term prognosis in bronchiectasis; causes of exacerbations in
chronic bronchitis and trial of rehabilitation procedures; prevalence
and prognosis of sarcoidosis; bronchial muscle function in asthma. Later
(with Barry Kay) immunology of asthma and bronchitis.
Other Edinburgh activities, 1963-1976
1963-66: Dean, Faculty of Medicine,
Edinburgh University
1966-69: With Andrew Douglas, edited
first three editions (1969, 1975, 1981) of postgraduate textbook –
‘Respiratory Diseases’ (4th and 5th editions edited
by other authors. Russian, Spanish, and Italian editions).
1969-71: Vice Principal of Edinburgh
University during period of global student militancy!
1973-76: President of Royal College
of Physicians of Edinburgh.
Activities after ‘retirement’ from clinical
medicine, 1977-present (2004)
Tobacco
One of the founders of UK Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) (through
Royal College of Physicians of London) and Scottish ASH (through Royal
College of Physicians of Edinburgh).
1984-88: First chairman of Tobacco or
Health Committee of IUATLD. Booklet for action by doctors and national
member associations and review of their subsequent actions. Pamphlet for
politicians in association with WHO. World survey (41 countries) of tobacco
habits and knowledge of medical students. Survey of deans of European
medical schools (jointly with WHO Europe) regarding their action on tobacco.
Major effort to stimulate action by WHO. Membership of WHO advisory committee
to plan 5-year programme, including addressing World Health Assembly on
behalf of NGOs in 1988.
1996: With Richard Doll, co-edited British
Council multi-author book on tobacco.
2002: With David Simpson, wrote basic
book – ‘Tobacco: A Global Threat’ - for third
world countries, central and eastern Europe. Editons so far in French
(for francophone Africa), Hungarian and Bulgarian (other editions being
prepared). Sponsored by Teaching Aids at Low Cost (TALC), International
Agency on Tobacco and Health, IUATLD, and Swedish Heart Lung Foundation.
2003-4: Advisor to lawyers in Scottish
litigation case against a tobacco company.
Tuberculosis
Three multi-month visits for WHO to Nepal 1978, 1981, and 1985 (including
a brief visit to Thailand). Extensive work for WHO Geneva in 1990s. Chaired
committee to produce first ‘Guide on Treatment for National
Control Programmes’ (DOTS programmes), and later for initiation
of DOTS Plus for dealing with multi-drug resistance. Wrote initial draft
on this.
With Norman Horne and Fred Miller, wrote ‘Clinical Tuberculosis’,
a simple book for third world countries. English editions in 1990 and
1999. Editions in 21 other languages so far. Sponsored by TALC and IUATLD.
Health Education
1981-86: Chaired Scottish Office committee
to coordinate health education in Scotland.
Produced reports on desirable action regarding tobacco, alcohol, and multiple
deprivation, for NHS and Local Authorities in Scotland. Considerable amount
of later work, including publications, on all three problems. Helped to
launch first Community Health Project in Edinburgh.
Honours, honorary degrees, prizes, medals and honorary
appointments
Civil honour: Knight Bachelor,
1977.
Honorary Fellowships/Memberships:
Australasian, Irish and American Colleges of Physicians; Faculty of Public
Health; Royal Society of Edinburgh; Royal Society of Medicine, London;
and Kings College London. Academies of Medicine of Argentina, Singapore,
and Catalonia, and of IUATLD.
Honorary degrees: Doctor Honoris
Causae, University of Bordeaux; Doctor of Science, Imperial College London.
Prize: Weber-Parkes Prize, Royal
College of Physicians, London, 1966.
Medals: Finnish Tuberculosis
Society, 1987; WHO (Tobacco), 1988; Edinburgh Medal and Prize for Science
and Society, 1995; British Thoracic Society, 1997; Leverhulme Medal, School
of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, 2000; Galen Medal in Therapeutics, Society
of Apothecaries of London, 2001.
Honorary appointments: Chair,
Research Committee, British Tuberculosis Association (now British Thoracic
Society), 1955-61. IUATLD: Chair Antibiotics and Chemotherapy Committee
1957-63, Diagnostic Scientific Committee 1968-72, Tobacco and Health Committee
1984-88. President of Scottish Thoracic Society; Thoracic Society (UK);
British Tuberculosis Association; Edinburgh Medicochirurgical Society;
(Hon) TB Alert.
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