Professor Don Bowden |
Don commenced his medical training at Monash
University in 1962 and graduated with first class honours in 1968. His academic
excellence is evidenced by him being awarded the Prince
Henry’s Hospital medal for the graduate with highest marks as well as the
Sophie Davis Memorial medal for the graduate with the highest aggregate marks
in all Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth year examinations.
Don undertook his
residency at the Alfred Hospital in 1969. In 1971 he set sail for the New
Hebrides now known as Vanuatu, where he was appointed as Medical Officer in the
British National Service. Here he provided care in all disciplines of medicine,
including paediatric and adult medicine, surgery, anaesthesia, obstetrics and
emergency neurosurgery. He was also responsible for developing laboratory
services. Don’s observations of an iron replete anaemia that was prevalent in
the local indigenous communities led to his interest in haemoglobinopathies.
This would later become his clinical and research passion and would in many
ways define and shape his future career.
Don briefly moved
to the United Kingdom in the mid-1970s where he completed his MRCP. Whilst in
the UK he had the privilege of working with leading clinicians in the
haemoglobinopathy field including Professor Dacie and Professor J. M. White. In
1976 Don returned to Vanuatu to assume the role of senior consultant physician
at the British Base Hospital in Port Vila. In addition, he also oversaw
laboratory and blood transfusion services on behalf of the British National
Service in the New Hebrides. In this role Don established diagnostic laboratory
facilities relevant to local needs, as well as a National Blood Transfusion
Service. This dual appointment provided Don with the opportunity to begin to
further investigate the public health significance of the haemoglobinopathies
in collaboration with Professor J White of Kings College Hospital. In 1979 Don
was appointed Director of Medical Services, British National Service, and
Medical Superintendent of the Vila Base Hospital. In this role Don was instrumental in
developing health service legislation prior to Vanuatu gaining independence.
Many of these legislative principles remain in place today. The regard with
which Don was held in Vanuatu is evidenced by his appointment as Senior Medical
Adviser to the Minister of Health, Republic of Vanuatu between 1980 and 1982.
During this period he was also made Deputy Director of Medical Services for the
Republic of Vanuatu.
Don’s commitment to improving the health needs of local communities
in Vanuatu was marked with him being awarded an Officer of the Order of the
British Empire (OBE) in 1979. Other honours bestowed upon him for his
contribution to the health system of Vanuatu included the Western Pacific High
Commission Medal (1979), the Vanuatu Government Independence Medal (1981) and
the Vanuatu Government National Medal of Merit (1993).
In 1982 Don
briefly returned to Melbourne to pursue his interest in the clinical and public
health aspects of the haemoglobinopathies. However, in 1983 he left for the UK
again to receive special training in molecular genetics in Sir Prof
Weatherall’s Department of Medicine, Oxford University. This began a long term
collaborative relationship between Don and Sir Prof David Weatherall. In the
ensuing years Don spent several periods at the Institute of Molecular Medicine
at Oxford University, chiefly in the laboratory of Professor John Clegg, Deputy
Director of the Institute of Molecular Medicine.
In 1985 Don undertook
further training in paediatrics under the guidance of Professor Arthur Clark.
Concurrently he established the first fully accredited DNA laboratory in
Australia, then located in the Department of Anatomy at Monash University. Don
continued to hold an active appointment within in the Department of Anatomy and
Cell Biology with full teaching, research and administrative responsibilities.
In 1998 he was made an Associate Professor in the Department of Anatomy and
Cell Biology, Monash University.
In 1988 Don was
appointed Head of the Clinical Genetics Division, Centre for Early Human
Development as well as paediatric haematologist/oncologist at Monash Medical
Centre. Additionally, since 1998 Don has served as Head of Thalassaemia Services Victoria and
Director of the Victorian Clinical Genetics Services (VCGS) molecular
diagnostic laboratory at Monash Medical Centre which functions as the State
Service for the molecular diagnosis of the haemoglobinopathies and haemophilia.
In this role, Don has also served as the head of the Victorian State
Thalassaemia Clinical Care Service at Monash Medical Centre.
Don’s academic success is evidenced by his
extensive publication record, including over 70 peer reviewed publications in
leading journals, several book chapters and the awarding of numerous
competitive grants from national and international funding bodies.
Over the past 4 decades Don’s contributions to
haemoglobinopathy management are too numerous to mention. As well as being a
pioneer in the molecular characterisation of the haemoglobinopathies, he has
been at the forefront of the development of oral iron
chelators and management protocols for thalassaemia patients. Indeed we can surely say that he has touched
the lives of many patients who no doubt are alive today as a direct result of
Dons care and attention. Additionally, the medical profession is indebted to
Don for his passionate education of a generation of
haematologists and medical students in anatomy as well as in haemoglobinopathy
management and diagnosis.
Over the years
many medical and allied health staff have been privileged to work with Don. He
has been a mentor, colleague and friend to many over the many years he has
served the health care community and for that we are eternally grateful.
We wish him all the best for a long, healthy
and happy retirement.
Written by staff from Monash Haematology.
Written by staff from Monash Haematology.
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