Australian paediatrician
Jean Sinclair "Clair" Isbister CBE , née Paton (12 September 1915 – 20 August 2008) was an Australian paediatrician.
She was born in Brisbane to Peter Sinclair Paton and Hannah, née Beet. Dux of St George Girls High School , she won scholarships to study at the University of Sydney .[ 1] She received a Bachelor of Medicine Sydney in 1938 and a Diploma of Child Health from the University of London in 1949.[ 2] Having met James Isbister at university, she graduated with him in 1938, working first at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and then at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children . They were married at Scots Church , Sydney, in 1940. She became consultant paediatrician at Royal North Shore Hospital in 1948, a position she held until her retirement in 1980.[ 1]
Isbister was the most prominent Australian paediatrician of her day, with radio and television appearances as well as books making her well-known. A staunch social conservative, she was on record opposing premarital sex , de facto relationships, infidelity and abortion .[ 1] She was created an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1969[ 3] and Commander in 1977.[ 4] [ 2] Associated with the Festival of Light , she stood twice for the Senate as a candidate for Fred Nile 's Call to Australia group.
Select publications
Isbister, Clair (1971). Birth, infancy and childhood . Farleigh Press.
—— (1976). Birth of a family a guide for expectant parents and those who care about children . Melbourne Thomas Nelson (Australia). ISBN 978-0-17-005062-3 .
—— (1985). Breast feeding for modern mothers . Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 978-0-340-36635-6 .
—— (1992). I'm sick! : when to call the doctor . Sally Milner Publications. ISBN 978-1-86351-060-8 .
References
External links
International National People