Marie Cassidy

Professor Marie Therese Jane Cassidy (born 1951) is a pathologist and academic. From 2004 to 2018 she was State Pathologist of Ireland, the first woman to hold the position.[1] She is Professor of Forensic Medicine at the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland and Trinity College, Dublin.

Professor Marie Cassidy
Born1951 (age 6869)
Rutherglen, Scotland
NationalityScottish
EducationUniversity of Glasgow
Known forfirst full-time female forensic pathologist in the UK
first female State Pathologist for Ireland
Medical career
Professionpathologist, academic
Sub-specialtiesforensic pathology

Early life and education

Marie Cassidy was born in Rutherglen, Glasgow, Scotland, in 1951. She is the granddaughter of emigrants from Donegal.[2] She lives in Dublin and is married with two children.

Cassidy studied medicine at the University of Glasgow, graduating in January 1978.

Career

She became a member of the Royal College of Pathologists in 1985 and a forensic pathologist the same year, making her the first female full-time forensic pathologist in the United Kingdom.

She held a professorship of forensic medicine at the University of Glasgow before moving to Ireland in 1998 to take up the position of Deputy State Pathologist.[3] She was appointed to the position of State Pathologist in January 2004, succeeding Professor John Harbison to become the first female State Pathologist in Ireland.[4]

She is also Professor of Forensic Medicine at the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland and Trinity College, Dublin.

Cassidy has also worked as a consultant for the United Nations, helping to identify the remains of victims of war crimes in Bosnia.[5]

Cassidy announced her intended retirement as State Pathologist of Ireland on 7 September 2018.[6]

She has acted as a consultant to the television crime series Taggart. She also advised Irish crime writer Alex Barclay.

A character in the book The Human Body is based on her.

gollark: Also, in that version there, patterns got fed in as a table with numeric indices from 1-9 representing each slot of the crafting table plus an optional qty key for how much the recipe produces.
gollark: Ridiculous. We *need* to be able to break maths in a snippet of code.
gollark: Here is a copy of the code I don't understand from the old version:```lualocal function descend(intermediateFn, terminalFn, i) local pattern = patterns[i] if pattern then intermediateFn(pattern) local pqty = pattern.qty -- Qty keys must be removed from the pattern for collation -- Otherwise, it shows up as a number stuck in the items needed table, which is bad. pattern.qty = nil local needs = util.collate(pattern) pattern.qty = pqty local has = {} for slot, item in pairs(pattern) do if util.satisfied(needs, has) then break end if patterns[item] then descend(intermediateFn, terminalFn, item) has[item] = (has[item] or 0) + (patterns[item].count or 1) end end else terminalFn(i) endendlocal function cost(i) local items = {} descend(function() end, function(i) table.insert(items, i) end, i) return util.collate(items)endlocal function tasks(i) local t = {} descend(function(pat) table.insert(t, pat) end, function() end, i) return tend```
gollark: Also, implementing whatever is done internally for finding free space to transfer to is hard!
gollark: I'm unlikely to have stupidly large autocrafting trees.

See also

References

  1. "State Pathologist's Office". Department of Justice and Equality. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2012.
  2. Moonan, Niall (2005). "STATE PATHOLOGIST MARIE CASSIDY TELLS OF HER GRUESOME WORK". The Mirror.
  3. Quinlan, Ailin (13 December 2010). "What I did today... Professor Marie Cassidy State Pathologist". Irish Independent. Dublin: Independent News & Media. Retrieved 10 November 2012.
  4. Press release on appointment as state pathologist Archived 12 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Raleigh, David. "Meet Marie Cassidy - Ireland's first female state pathologist". The Irish Examiner. Retrieved 2 July 2014.
  6. "State Pathologist Marie Cassidy to retire". Journal. 7 September 2018. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
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