| Pauline Monro was
an outstanding medical student, gaining first class
honours in her BSc at University College London, and
then Distinction in both Medicine and Pathology when
she qualified from University College Hospital in 1958.
She was also a competitive swimmer, wining a Gold Medal
in the World University games at Dortmund in 1953.
Like many others, she was inspired to go into neurology
by JZ Young whom she had heard - while still at school
- give the Reith lectures. Despite the challenges at
a time when there were less than a handful of female
consultant neurologists in the UK, and an almost fatal
illness late in her training, she was appointed a consultant
to Atkinson Morley's Hospital, London, in 1970 - the
first woman to be appointed to the consultant staff
of the St George's Hospitals. At AMH she threw her energies
into creating one of the best Neurosciences Centres
in the UK, encouraging multidisciplinary team meetings
before they were fashionable, and developing an integrated
neurology course for the medical students. Such was
her charisma, that I can actually remember the teaching
round when she explained to us the difference between
upper and lower motor neurone lesions when I was a St
George's medical student in 1967.
She retired from the NHS in 1993 and later became the
first woman to be President of the Section of Neurosciences
at the Royal Society of Medicine. As a result of going
on the ABN visit to Leningrad in 1988, Pauline became
passionately involved with helping the neurological
services in what had by then become St Petersburg, as
well as in Russia generally. She became so fluent in
Russian from a standing start that she can now lecture
easily in the language, bought a flat in St Petersburg,
and befriended young Russian neuroscientists. All this
culminated in the most deserved award of an MBE in 2000.
This is really her life work, more than being an NHS
consultant, however successful - as she told me recently
'driving across Europe to Russia in an ambulance with
Zimmer frames is much more interesting than being an
NHS neurologist".
Despite the loss of Michael in 2000, her beloved husband
and partner, Pauline continues her work in Russia with
as much energy as ever. I can't believe she will ever
stop shuttling backwards and forwards to Russia with
yet another small band of British physiotherapists or
nurses going one way and their Russian counterparts
coming the other. When Pauline first went to Russia,
neurological care there had been isolated from the West
for 70 years.
Now, encouraged and helped by Pauline, the first multidisciplinary
stroke team in Pavlov's Medical University Hospital
is accepted by the local Committee of Health as a model
centre, one of many examples of good practice which
are springing up across the city. In St Petersburg she
is known to everyone as Paulina, and so it is with great
pleasure that I invite you - Paulina - to give your
lecture entitled 'Russian and British Neurology: contacts
and contrasts'.
CP Warlow, 5 April 2002
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