Trevor Beard

Trevor Cory Beard, OBE (11 May 1920 – 2 September 2010) was a British-born Australian medical doctor, best known for his work in the 1960s to eradicate echinococcosis (or hydatid disease) in Tasmania. In later life, Beard was known as an anti-salt campaigner.

Trevor Beard

OBE
Born
Trevor Cory Beard

(1920-05-11)11 May 1920
Gloucester, England, United Kingdom
Died2 September 2010(2010-09-02) (aged 90)
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
NationalityBritish
CitizenshipAustralian
EducationUniversity of Cambridge
University of California, Berkeley
OccupationGeneral practitioner
Known forEchinococcosis eradication
Medical career
ProfessionMedical doctor
InstitutionsMenzies Centre for Population Health Research
AwardsOfficer of the Order of the British Empire (1966)

Born in Gloucester, England, Beard studied medicine and surgery at Cambridge, and a Master of Public Health at University of California, Berkeley where he was elected to the Zeta chapter of Delta Omega, the honorary society for graduate studies in public health. He also received a DObst RCOG from the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists in London. Following qualification, he was a resident at St Bartholomew's Hospital, and later the City of London Maternity Hospital. He then enlisted in the British Army, attaining the rank of Captain in the Royal Army Medical Corps.[1]

Beard emigrated to Australia in the 1950s, where he worked as a general practitioner. At his practice in Campbell Town, Tasmania, he began to notice a large number of adult and paediatric cases of echinococcosis—cysts caused by the larval phase of the Echinococcus tapeworm, usually transmitted to humans by dogs. When a young boy in the town died from a ruptured hydatid cyst, Beard persuaded the rural community to start a prevention and eradication campaign. Following a fact-finding trip to New Zealand where a campaign to eradicate Echinococcosis was already underway, Beard formed the Tasmanian Hydatids Eradication Council and worked with the Tasmanian government to establish and implement a formal prevention, testing and eradication program.[2] In February 1996, Tasmania was declared provisionally free of hydatids in humans, dogs and livestock—the first territory in the world to do so.

In 1979, concerned about his own high blood pressure, Beard read a medical journal editorial entitled "Hypertension – salt poisoning?", which sparked his special interest in salt intake as a public health issue.[3] Beard continued to campaign for reduction or elimination of salt from the diet in his active retirement role as a senior research fellow at the University of Tasmania's Menzies Centre for Population Health Research. He authored the book Salt Matters: the Killer Condiment, published by Hachette Australia.[4]

Beard died on 2 September 2010, aged 90.[5]

Awards and honours

In the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1966, Beard was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to public health, in particular his role as Secretary of the Tasmanian Hydatids Eradication Council.[6]

In 2006, he was made Senior Australian of the Year for Tasmania.[7]

gollark: I could add random undocumented instructions so people can have fun with sandsifter-type stuff too, what could possibly go wrong.
gollark: `JLE - Jump If Lesser Evil` sounds fun.
gollark: That just immediately halts.
gollark: Oh, fun idea, add 16 more registers and make one of them contain a value which determines how much to increment the program counter by each instruction.
gollark: It does some random stuff and prints out debug info.

References

  1. THE AUTHOR, Trevor Cory Beard Archived 21 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Salt Matters.
  2. Molyneux, David (2007). Control of Human Parasitic Diseases. Academic Press. p. 457. ISBN 0-12-031765-6.
  3. Munro, Peter: The silent killer we can't seem to live without, The Age, 11 July 2010.
  4. Our Authors Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Authors' Agent.
  5. Trailblazing tapeworm disease doctor dies, ABC News, 8 September 2010.
  6. BEARD, Trevor Cory, It's an Honour, 11 June 1966.
  7. Dr Trevor Beard OBE Archived 28 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Australian of the Year, 2006.
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