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Robert Willan

English physician (1757–1812)


English physician (1757–1812)

FieldValue
nameRobert Willan
imageRobert willan.jpg
captionPhotograph of Robert Willan
birth_date12 November 1757
birth_placeSedbergh, Yorkshire, England
death_date7 April 1812
death_placeMadeira, Portugal
occupationDermatologist

NOTOC Robert Willan (12 November 1757 near Sedbergh, Yorkshire, England – 7 April 1812 in Madeira, Portugal) was an English physician, and the founder of dermatology as a medical specialty.

Life

Willan was born on 12 November 1757 in Sedbergh, Yorkshire. He was educated at Sedbergh School, and received his medical degree at the University of Edinburgh in 1780. After completing his medical studies, William worked in Darlington until 1783, when he moved to London to serve as physician at the Carey Street Public Dispensary until 1803. While working alongside Thomas Bateman, Willan was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1809. He died on 7 April 1812, in Madeira, Portugal.

Works

Following the example of Carl Linnaeus, Willan attempted a taxonomic classification of skin diseases, describing impetigo, lupus, psoriasis, scleroderma, ichthyosis, sycosis, and pemphigus. Willan's portrait was reproduced on the cover of the British Journal of Dermatology for many years. Willan and Bateman working together provided the world's first attempt to classify skin diseases from an anatomical standpoint.

In 1790, Willan received the Fothergill Gold Medal from the Medical Society of London for his classification of skin diseases. In the same year, he published an account entitled "A Remarkable Case of Abstinence", which detailed the case of a young Englishman with an eating disorder who died in 1786 after fasting for 78 days.

A copy of one of his works was translated into German and published in Breslau in 1799. The English version has been lost.

In 1798, Willan described the occupational disease psoriasis diffusa, which affects the hands and arms of bakers, and in 1799, he first described the exanthematous rash of childhood known as erythema infectiosum.

Willan's 1808 book, On Cutaneous Diseases is a landmark in the history of dermatology and in medical illustration and contains the first use of the word "lupus" to describe cutaneous tuberculosis.

References

References

  1. (2000). "Dates in medicine: a chronological record of medical progress over three millennia". Parthenon Publ. Group.
  2. "Robert Willan".
  3. (1997). "Viral infections of humans: epidemiology and control". Plenum medical book company.
  4. (2002). "Discussing chemistry and steam: the minutes of a coffe house philosophical society, 1780-1787". Oxford university press.
  5. Silverman, Joseph A.. (1990). "Males with Eating Disorders". Brunner/Mazel.
  6. Fagge, C. Hilton. "On Disease of the Skin by Ferdinand Hebra, N.D.". The New Sydenham Society, London.
  7. (2002). "Dates in infectious diseases". Parthenon.
  8. Bateman, Thomas. (1817). "Delineations of Cutaneous Diseases: exhibiting the characteristic appearances of the principal genera and species comprised in the classification of the late Dr. Willan; and completing the series of engravings begun by that author". Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green.
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