He studied medicine at Liverpool University. He worked at the medical receiving centre at Alder Hey Hospital which received casualties from the evacuation of Dunkirk.[1] During his national service he became major in charge of the British hospital in Khartoum.
In 1949 he was appointed medical officer with the Liverpool Shipping Federation but was sacked because of his politics. He then set up as a general practitioner in his home in Sefton Drive, Liverpool. He became an active member of the Hospital and Welfare Services Union and later the Confederation of Health Service Employees.[2] He stood for election to the City Council as a Communist in 1949 and was reprimanded by COHSE for referring to his membership in his election literature. He left the Communist Party in 1956.[3] He played for Sefton Rugby Club until he was 40.
He pioneered the concept of NHS Health Centres and was instrumental in establishing the Princes Parkhealth centre,[6] in Toxteth in 1977.[7]Beryl Bainbridge,[8]Fritz Spiegl,[9]Alexei Sayle and Adrian Henri were his patients there. Henri produced a poem and a portrait of him as a tennis player.[10] In 2021 two of his former colleagues, Katy Gardner and Susanna Graham-Jones, produced an account of the centre: A Radical Practice in Liverpool: the rise, fall and rise of the Princes Park Health centre.[11]
^Gardner, Katy; Graham-Jones, Susanna (2021). A Radical Practice in Liverpool: the rise, fall and rise of the Princes Park Health centre. Liverpool: Writing on the Wall. p. 268. ISBN9781910580561.