Tom Oppé

Thomas Ernest Oppé (7 February 1925 – 25 June 2007) was an English paediatrician and a professor of paediatrics at St Mary's Hospital, London. He is regarded as a pioneer in children's health services and infant nutrition.[1][2]

Early life

Oppé was born in 1925 in Hampstead to Ernest Frederick, a banker, and Ethel Nellie (née Rackstraw). His paternal uncle was the historian and art collector Paul Oppé.[1] Tom Oppé attended University College School, and went into banking at the age of 15. He left after six months, deciding that he would prefer to study medicine, and began his pre-clinical training at Guy's Hospital in 1942. He was evacuated to Tunbridge Wells for much of the Second World War, and graduated with honours in 1947. He completed his national service as a surgeon lieutenant with the Royal Navy Medical Service, working mostly on board the aircraft carrier HMS Implacable.[3]

Career

Oppé had decided to pursue paediatrics as a medical student. He completed a year as house physician at Guy's Hospital,[4] although this was interrupted when he was hospitalised for nine months with tuberculosis.[3] He then moved to Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital for two years and travelled to Harvard University for a research fellowship. After two years at St Mary's Hospital as a paediatric registrar,[4] in 1955 he was appointed a consultant paediatrician in Bristol. In Bristol he worked alongside the neonatology pioneer Beryl Corner, who would continue to influence him after he left Bristol. In 1960 he returned to St Mary's in London, where he would spend the rest of his career and was appointed a professor of paediatrics in 1969.[4]

Oppé had vast research interests, and the topics of his published articles included premature infants, hypoglycaemia in infants, infant respiratory distress syndrome, the treatment of rhesus disease, and vitamin D deficiency.[4] His most cited work was on the nutrition of babies; he chaired a Department of Health and Social Security working party which produced a report in 1974 recommending that infants be breastfed for the first 4–6 months of life, which came at a time when most British babies were being fed with infant formulas based on cow's milk.[2][5] He had a special interest in Williams syndrome after working with a Navy colleague whose child had the genetic condition.[1][4]

Oppé was an adviser to the government on many aspects of child health and nutrition, and was a key member of the committee that published the 1976 report "Fit for the Future", which outlined a plan for the provision of child health services.[1] He was made a CBE in 1984 for his services to paediatrics.[5]

Personal life

Oppé met his wife Margaret while he was working at Guy's Hospital, where she was a nurse.[4] Together they had three children and fostered a daughter.[1] He retired in 1990 and died on 25 June 2007, in Kingston upon Thames.[5][4]

gollark: I can't hear you, I'm busy working on my business pitch to investors about real-time butterfly tracking.
gollark: I was talking about your rain prediction thing being maybe theoretically possible.
gollark: For instance, you would need position and accelerometer data on the wings of *every butterfly*!
gollark: Not *theoretically possible* as in "it will actually likely be possible to do it within a few centuries".
gollark: Well, *theoretically possible* in that it's not explicitly forbidden as far as I know.

References

  1. Craft, Alan (2008). "Thomas Ernest Oppe". BMJ. 336 (7639): 335. doi:10.1136/bmj.39428.735046.BE. PMC 2234559.
  2. "Professor Tom Oppe". The Times. 17 August 2007. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
  3. Rivers, Rodney. "Thomas Ernest Oppé". Munk's Roll Volume XII. Royal College of Physicians. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
  4. Richmond, Caroline (24 September 2007). "Professor Thomas Oppe". The Independent. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
  5. "Professor Tom E. Oppe". Imperial College London. 9 January 2008. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
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