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Rosemary Rue : ウィキペディア英語版
Rosemary Rue

Dr Dame Rosemary Rue, DBE, FRCP, FFPHM, FRCPsych, FRCGP FRCS (born 14 June 1928, Hutton, Essex – died 24 December 2004, Stanton St. John, Oxfordshire) was a British physician and civil servant, most notable as the one-time regional general manager/medical officer of the Oxford Regional Health Authority.
She was also:
* President of the Medical Women’s Federation (1982-1983)
* President of the Faculty of Community Medicine of the Royal College of Physicians (1986-1989)
* President of the British Medical Association (1990-1991)
* Founding Fellow of Green College, Oxford
* Awarded the Edward Jenner Medal of the Royal Society of Medicine (2001)
==Background==
Elsie Rosemary Laurence was born in 1928 in Essex and moved with her family to London in 1933. She was evacuated in 1940 during The Blitz to stay with relatives in Devonshire, where she contracted tuberculosis and peritonitis. It was while she was convalescing that she decided on a career in medicine, entering the all-woman Royal Free Medical School in London in 1945.
In 1950 she married Roger Rue, a pilot instructor of Belgian descent in the Royal Air Force. When she told the medical school dean that she was changing her name, she was told that she could not stay at the school if she was married. She was instead accepted at the University of Oxford, qualifying in 1951 after taking the University of London exams.〔(''The Independent'' obituary for Dr Dame Rosemary Rue ), independent.co.uk, 5 January 2005.〕
Her first job was at an extended-care hospital in Oxford. She did not tell her employers that she had a husband or a newborn son, as many hospitals then didn't employ married women. She was eventually sacked when her employers learned she was married with children. In 1954, she contracted polio from a patient, becoming the last person in Oxford to get it.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk/Biography/Details/5878 )
The disease left her with one useless leg; even with her crutches and callipers she could barely walk or carry a medical bag. For a while she taught in a girls' school. When she went (by car) for interview for medical jobs, if she found that she could not climb the steps to the front door, she would phone and say that she had accepted another post.
New hospitals were constructed in Swindon, Reading and Milton Keynes, with basic modules that could be incorporated into every hospital. In 1960, she was named Assistant County Medical Officer for Hertfordshire and worked as a part-time paediatrician in Watford. She spent an academic term at the Institute of Child Health in London. In 1965, she was offered the job of Senior Assistant Medical Officer for the Oxford region, running that region's health authority. In the early 1960s new money was allocated by the government to rebuild the crumbling medical system in the UK. Dr Rue ensured that Oxford got a fair share.〔

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