| Christopher Earl
is an outstanding presence in our profession. His early
clinical training at Guy's Hospital and Queen Square,
and especially the influence of Sir Charles Symonds,
nurtured his natural talent as a physician. From his
laboratory training with Robert Thompson at Guy's and
in particular with Derek Denny-Brown at Harvard, he
developed a lasting concern with the mechanisms of disorder
and disease in the nervous system. He has, as all those
who have seen him at work know, a remarkable memory
for the individual case, the salient features of which
he can summon up to illuminate the specific problem
at hand. To witness him dissecting a history, incorporating
the relevant clinical and investigative findings while
discarding with a sure instinct the unhelpful, is an
example which has influenced students of neurology of
all ages over the past four decades. For the patient,
his warm concern as he communicates - ever clearly -
the results of his objective assessment and advises
on management informed by all aspects of the patient's
circumstances, is deeply reassuring, and has earned
him a wide reputation. Christopher Earl's skills as
a physician, his wisdom, his manifest enthusiasm for
clinical medicine, and his personal integrity have determined
the influential roles he has played in the hospitals
with which he has been associated including the Royal
London, the Middlesex and the National Hospital, Queen
Square; as advisor or consultant to a number of Government
agencies and the Air Force; in the Royal Society of
Medicine as President of the Section of Neurology; in
the Royal College of Physicians as Censor; and in our
own Association as Secretary and President. We owe him
much and this we symbolise in the award of the ABN Medal.
WI McDonald 12 April 1996
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