In the 1930s, he set up the first birth control clinic in Hong Kong. He pushed for changes in abortion law, promoted psychological preparedness for childbirth, and wrote and spoke on diet in pregnancy. Unlike many others in his field in his time, his concern over the number of illegal abortions and mental state of women with unwanted pregnancies led him to offer abortions in the NHS before the Abortion Act 1967.
In 1964 he was an expert witness at the Dering v Uris trial.
Early life and education
William Nixon was born William Carl Wallace Nixon, on 22 November 1903 in Floriana, Malta, to mathematics professor William Nixon and his wife Melita née Reichelmann.[1][2] Fear of his German background led his parents to send him to England in 1918 and then to change "Carl" to "Charles" in 1920.[1] He completed his early education at Epsom College, where he excelled in sports and became prefect.[1] In 1922 he gained a scholarship to study medicine at St Mary's Hospital Medical School, where he played on their rugby team.[3] In 1927 he received the conjoint.[4]
By 1934, both St Mary's and Queen Charlotte's had taken him on as consultant.[5] The following year he resigned to take up a professorship in Hong Kong, where he set up the country's first birth control clinic.[6] He worked there for a few years before returning to England in 1938, when he joined the Soho Hospital for Women and the London County Council as consultant.[5] In 1941 he delivered the fourth Blair-Bell Memorial Lecture, the topic of his talk being diet in pregnancy.[7]
Later career
In 1943 Nixon was sent to the University of Istanbul, Turkey, where he was appointed professor.[5] When he returned to London three years later, he took over F. J. Browne as director of obstetrics at University College London (UCL) and professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at the University of London.[5] He became a member of the Expert Advisory Committee on Maternity Care for the World Health Organization and the Ministry of Health's Standing Advisory Committee on Maternity Services.[5] In 1947, he was on the British Medical Association council.[5] He pushed for changes in abortion law and promoted psychological preparedness for childbirth.[2][8] In 1954, he called for a survey to compare hospital births with home births.[9] This later led to the perinatal mortality survey of the National Birthday Trust Fund.[9]
Nixon was a member of the Abortion Law Reform Association, whose work contributed to the later Abortion Act 1967.[10] Unlike many others in his field in the early 1960s, his understanding of the high number of complicated backstreet abortions, and resulting mental illness of women with unwanted pregnancies led him to offer safer abortions in the NHS, before the passing of the 1967 Abortion Act.[8][11][a] As explained by Geoffrey Chamberlain, none of Nixon's abortions at UCL were illegal.[8] His mentor Bourne, had already tested in the courts in 1938 that an abortion could be performed on mental health grounds, to prevent psychological stress in an underage girl pregnant by rape.[8] Women approached Nixon knowing he would be non-discriminatory and not overcharge them.[8] To confirm the mental state of the woman, he was assisted by psychiatrists; first Keith Soddy and later Elizabeth Tylden.[8]
^By 1920 in the UK, the procedure of induced abortion was generally safe when performed by trained professionals.[12] By the mid-1960s unsafe abortion was the leading cause of avoidable maternal deaths.[13] Over the course of a decade following the 1967 Abortion Act, gynaecological admissions due to abortion complications dropped significantly and deaths ceased.[10]
References
^ abcChamberlain, Geoffrey (2004). "1. Early days". Special Delivery: The Life of the Celebrated British Obstetrician, William Nixon. London: Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Press. pp. 1–7. ISBN1-900364-98-0.
^Chamberlain, Geoffrey (2004). "2. The medical student (1922-1927)". Special Delivery: The Life of the Celebrated British Obstetrician, William Nixon. London: Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Press. pp. 8–20. ISBN1-900364-98-0.
^ abcdChamberlain, Geoffrey (2004). "3. Postgraduate training (1924-1927)". Special Delivery: The Life of the Celebrated British Obstetrician, William Nixon. London: Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Press. pp. 21–26. ISBN1-900364-98-0.
^Russell, Bertrand (2012). "Annotation". The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell Volume 29: Détente or Destruction, 1955-57. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 510. ISBN978-0-415-35837-8.
^ abcdefChamberlain, Geoffrey (2004). "9. Nixon the man (1928-1965)". Special Delivery: The Life of the Celebrated British Obstetrician, William Nixon. London: Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Press. pp. 109–123. ISBN1-900364-98-0.