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Albertine Winner

Dame Albertine Louisa Winner was a British physician and medical administrator. After graduating from University College Hospital Medical School, Winner practised at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital, the Mothers' Hospital in Clapton, and Maida Vale Hospital for Nervous Diseases.

Early life and education
Albertine Louisa Wiener, an only child, was born in Coulsdon, London to Isidore Wiener and Annie Stonex. and her mother was British. She attended Francis Holland School, a private girls' school at Clarence Gate in London. During her time there she was elected as head girl. Winner gained a Bachelor of Science Honours degree in physiology from University College London. She also played for the university's tennis team. She followed this with an MD in 1934, and the next year she became a Member of the Royal Colleges of Physicians of the United Kingdom (MRCP). ==Career==
Career
Physician and administrator After qualifying, Winner worked at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital, the Mothers' Hospital in Clapton, and the Maida Vale Hospital for Nervous Diseases. She developed an interest in neurology through the guidance of Sir Francis Walshe. Another important mentor early in her career was Sir Thomas Lewis. She was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1946 New Year Honours for her wartime service. Winner also later served as the honorary consultant to the ATS from 1946 to 1970. After the end of the war and on the eve of the emergence of the National Health Service, Winner joined the Department of Health in 1947 as its first female deputy chief medical officer, a position she would serve in for the next twenty years. Throughout her career, she was interested in the treatment of the chronically sick, as well as a general interest in the welfare of patients. She was also appointed as the Linacre Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, a position she held from 1967 to 1978. While serving in the position, Winner played a key role in developing postgraduate medical training posts for the Joint Committee on Higher Medical Training. Later career and the hospice movement After retiring from the medical profession in 1967, Cicely Saunders asked for her financial assistance in establishing the first modern hospice. Winner was initially apprehensive but soon saw its importance and helped establish St Christopher's Hospice in Sydenham, London, and she supervised its construction served as its deputy medical director when it opened in 1967. ==Personal life==
Personal life
Interested in art, she collected valuable Japanese prints. Her other interests included travel, sport, and opera. She considered herself a "sympathetic agnostic" when she joined the Christian foundation of St Christopher's. In her later years, she returned to the Jewish faith of her father. She died on 13 May 1988 at the Lancaster Lodge nursing home in Wimbledon, London at the age of 81. ==References==
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