John Brownlee (1868–1927) was a British physician and medical statistician who became the first director of the Statistics Department of the UK's Medical Research Committee.[1]
Life
editThe son of a Church of Scotland minister, he studied at the University of Glasgow, obtaining degrees first in mathematics and natural philosophy and then in medicine. He became in 1900 physician-superintendent to the City of Glasgow Fever Hospital.[2][3] In 1914 he became the founding director of the statistics department of the UK Medical Research Committee and held the post until his sudden death from bronchopneumonia in 1927.[4]
Works
editBrownlee was influenced by Karl Pearson's mathematical approach to statistics, and applied the Pearson family of distributions to epidemics. In the view of fellow epidemiologist and statistician Major Greenwood, Brownlee took these techniques further than any of his contemporaries.[5] His studies included the epidemiology of phthisis and measles.[2]
References
edit- ^ Farewell V, Johnson T, Armitage P (2006). "'A memorandum on the Present Position and Prospects of Medical Statistics and Epidemiology' by Major Greenwood". Stat Med. 25 (13): 2161–77. doi:10.1002/sim.2608. PMID 16755605.
- ^ a b BMJ Obituary
- ^ "Dr. Richard R. Hopkins". Can Med Assoc J. 17 (6): 749. 1927. PMC 407360.
- ^ George Davey Smith (2 April 2011). "How do we know, what do we know and what can knowledge do? From John Brownlee to translational medicine". International Journal of Epidemiology. Archived from the original on 9 July 2012. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
- ^ p. 6 of PDF.doi:10.1007/BF01318387