Exactly
hundred years ago to last Sunday, 28th October, when a male child
was born at Hampton into the affluent family of the Dolls, no one knew that he would
one day save millions of lives, that too, “without touching anyone”. That boy
was none other than Sir Professor Richard Doll, a British physiologist—who
“published 436 works—eight for every year of his working life” (by the age of
84 years) and continued to research up to his death at the age of 92 in 2005—whom
the medical fraternity revered as the foremost epidemiologist of the 20th
century.
Richard
Doll grew up in London’s Knightsbridge in a “magnificent 18th
century house.” He went to Westminster School, where his brilliance in
mathematics came for praise. Much against the wishes of his parents, who wanted
him to become a doctor like his father, he, intending to study mathematics at
Trinity College, Cambridge, gave the mathematics scholarship exam, but due to
an excess of Trinity beer the night before, failed. Although the authorities
offered him a second chance, feeling embarrassed, he switched over to medicine
and went to St. Thomas’s Hospital Medical School, King’s College, London, from where
he graduated in 1937.
Although born into
and brought up in a comfortable, middle-class affluence, right from his young
age, Doll’s leanings were more towards the Left, for he believed: “Capitalist
society was just not working.” As a young man in the 1930s, witnessing
suffering, mass unemployment and malnutrition all around, he joined the communist
party, describing himself as a “democratic communist”. He spent his
twenty-first birthday money to visit the Soviet Union. He took part in the
Jarrow March, the 1936 mass protest against unemployment, and offered medical
assistance by way of treating destitute participants’ blisters. Despairing that
only the rich could afford good doctors, he joined the Inter-Hospital Socialist
Society and campaigned to the point of almost being ostracized from the medical
establishment for the formation of Britain’s free National Health Service in
1948.
During the World
War II, Doll served in the Royal Army Medical Corps in Cairo and at Dunkirk
(1939-45). After the war, he married Joan Faulkner, a left-wing medical
colleague. Returning
from the war, he joined St Thomas’s but looking to the kind of sycophancy going
around, he felt that instead of working as a clinical physician, he should look
for a decent appointment. Driven by this
discomfort and encouraged by Joan, Doll took a post in clinical
epidemiological research in gastroenterology, where he came out with
statistical evidence to the effect that peptic ulceration was caused more by
stress.
Then, in 1947, the
pre-eminent medical statistician, Austin Bradford Hill, head of the MRC Medical
Statistics Unit at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, a known
political conservative, not minding Doll’s politics, offered him a temporary
research post, believing that “once you have got obsessional about research,
you haven’t got time for communism…” That is where he, along with Sir Austin
Bradford Hill, embarked on their investigation into the causes of lung cancer—a
disease that caused much worry to the then British scientists, for, a rare
disease that it was once, had become “commoner and commoner.” Yet nobody knew
the real cause of it.
Some speculated
that exhaust fumes of motorcars might be causing the disease. Doll himself thought
that “the rise in lung cancer was something to do with the tar on the road.”
However, when Doll and Hill administered questionnaires to patients with
suspected cancers in the hospital, enquiring their background, social class,
where they lived, whether they owned a car, ate tinned food, smoking habits,
etc. and compared the answers, they found that those confirmed patients with
lung cancer almost always turned out to be smokers, while all those who got the
all-clear were not smokers. It is interesting to recall how Richard reacted to
the progress of this study: “It wasn’t long before it became clear that
cigarette smoking may be to blame. I gave up smoking two-thirds of the way
through the study.” Finally, in 1950, Doll and Hill published a report in the British Medical Journal indicating a
correlation between smoking and lung cancer, for in a survey of 649 lung cancer
cases, there were only two non-smokers.
Their conclusion
that cigarette smoking was “a cause and an important cause” of lung cancer was
however greeted with “apathy, disbelief and scientific condemnation”, writes
his biographer, Keating. It was perhaps obvious, for the news came in an era
when 80% of British men were smokers. Even medical scientists did not accept
these findings. The government too was not comfortable with their findings, for
14% of its tax revenues were from tobacco sales.
To understand the
real role of smoking in lung cancer, Doll and Hill wrote letters to 40,000 doctors
in Britain in 1951, enquiring them if they smoked. During the next three years,
they compared these answers with the information about doctors who developed
lung cancer. Based on this statistical information, Doll then co-authored a
paper with Hill confirming the link between smoking and lung cancer. This
prompted the then UK health minister to call a news-conference and declare,
ironically chain-smoking throughout: “It must be regarded as established that
there is a relationship between smoking and cancer of the lung.” This study,
besides bringing down the percentage of smokers from 80% in 1954 to 26% by 2007,
ultimately became the foundation for all subsequent research on the impact of
cigarette smoking on health. Which is why, it is often said that Doll’s
findings saved millions of lives all over the world.
Indeed, Doll, strongly believing “Death in old age is inevitable, but death before old age is not,” actively engaged with public policy and litigation cases pertaining to cancer causation. Although initially he had chosen to act as a scientist simply to present the evidence and allowing the concerned to act on it, in later years, he testified in courts against tobacco industry and even advocated banning tobacco promotion.
Indeed, Doll, strongly believing “Death in old age is inevitable, but death before old age is not,” actively engaged with public policy and litigation cases pertaining to cancer causation. Although initially he had chosen to act as a scientist simply to present the evidence and allowing the concerned to act on it, in later years, he testified in courts against tobacco industry and even advocated banning tobacco promotion.
Having established
the relationship between smoking and lung cancer, Doll turned his attention to
study the role of asbestos in causing mesothelioma—a rare form of cancer that
develops from transformed cells originating in the mesothelium, the protective
lining that covers many of the internal organs of the body; harmful effects of
nuclear radiation; role of electrical power lines in causing cancer; the
relationship between drinking alcohol and breast cancer, and the link between
the contraceptive pill and thrombosis and its preventive effect on certain
cancers.
In 1961, on
Hills’s retirement, Doll became the Director of MRC Statistical Unit. In 1969,
he moved to Oxford as Regius Professor of Medicine. Despite the initial
hostility from the fellow doctors for his known left-wing orientation, he enjoyed
an intensive decade of work at new frontiers. Besides training many young
medical researchers, he developed his cancer epidemiology research unit, and established
Green Templeton College for medical students. In the process he made Oxford a
world center for epidemiology.
All through his
research life, Doll was driven by the philosophy of caution, thoroughness and
social responsibility. In the words of Keating, his biographer: “[Doll believed
that] if an investigation found something that was unexpected and which was
going to be of social significance, then there was an obligation to make sure
that the answer was right before publishing the results to the world.” Doll thus “ushered in a new era in medicine
shaped by the intellectual ascendency of medical statistics”, indeed a new “philosophy
of epidemiological research.” His concern for the human welfare well reflects
in what he said: “The objective of science is to gain power to control nature
in the interests of humanity.”
His pioneering
work on many fronts won him countless awards, the notable being the United
Nation’s Award for cancer research in 1962; Knighthood from Queen in 1971; Bruce
Medal from the American College of Physicians in 1981; Royal Medal from the
Royal Society in 1986; Gold Medal from
the European Cancer Society in 2000; and Norway’s King Olaf V Award for
outstanding work on cancer.
Even this known lifelong
socialist, whose only concern was welfare of mankind, could not avoid
allegations—after his death, articles appeared alleging that he failed to
disclose payments received from a chemical company. The prime focus was on the
money received from Monsanto. But his biographer Keating says that Doll never
hid his relationship with industry, but was careful to record all his dealings,
as could be seen from the documents deposited with Welcome Trust Library. It is
said that all the money received from Monsanto was handed over to charity.
Keating argues that “Dolls’ reputation was built on integrity.”
A streak of this
personal philosophy of Doll perhaps reflects in his plea made from his
deathbed. In 2005, as his life was nearing its end, Doll had asked the Oxford
GP and the consultant cardiologist attending to him at the John Radcliffe
Hospital to suspend their Hippocratic oaths and expedite his death, for,
according to his biographer, Conrad Keating, “He strongly believed that it was
wrong to spend large sums of money trying to keep an old person alive for a few
months when, by spending less money, a young person could be kept alive for 50
years”.
That is Sir Richard
Doll, the patrician-turned-revolutionary—a revolutionary in the realms of
politics, medical science, academia, and public health.
*****
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