Ann Dally

Ann Dally (29 March 1926, in London – 24 March 2007, in Graffham, West Sussex[1]) was an English author and psychiatrist.

Born Ann Gwendolen Mullins, she was the eldest child of the lawyer Claud William Mullins (1887–1968) and his wife Elizabeth Gwendolen Brandt (1904–1997).[2] Dally studied at Somerville College, Oxford. She married Dr. Peter Dally in 1950. Dally was the first woman to study medicine at St Thomas' Hospital, London in 1953 and became a Harley Street Psychiatrist.

She undertook controversial treatment of heroin addicts and was put on trial by the General Medical Council and the National Health Service. She wrote about her experience in A Doctor's Story (1990).

Bibliography

  • A Doctor's Story (1990)
  • Inventing Motherhood
  • Why Women Fail
  • The Intelligent Person's Guide to Modern Medicine
  • A Child is Born
  • Cicely: The Story of a Doctor
  • Mothers - their power and influence
  • The Morbid Streak: Destructive Aspects of the Personality
  • Women Under the Knife - A history of surgery Hutchinson Radius, London, 1991, ISBN 0-09-174508-X
gollark: I saw one of my bred thingies in a trade! Cool!
gollark: I, too, can possibly provide a 2G or two.
gollark: Truly, Demoncat_1217, you are demonic, making me mildly irritated at waiting ages for a response to an offer on a trade implying free!
gollark: I can breed them generally speaking, but right now I need to conserve slots.
gollark: Come on, person on hub with four free xenowyrms (I assume they're free...), accept my offer!

References

  1. Library of Congress Name Authority File
  2. Crawford, Catherine. "Dally, Ann Gwendolen". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/98642. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.