Jackson was born in Dublin in 1918 to Robert Jackson, a jeweller, and Monica Roberts. The clinic had been started by
Winifred Young in 1950 and at the time was one of only a few cystic fibrosis clinics in the country. Jackson was postgraduate dean at the
London Hospital Medical College from 1970 to 1982. He served on the council of the
Royal College of Physicians and, for ten years from 1984, as chair of the
Cystic Fibrosis Trust's Research and Medical Advisory Committee. He became president of the
Royal Society of Medicine's paediatrics section in 1981 and president of the Association for Paediatric Education in Europe in 1986. He was awarded honorary fellowship of the
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health upon its founding in 1996. He died on 24 December 2005 from
pneumonia and
peritonitis, after developing
chronic renal failure several years earlier. Following his death, the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health established a prize in his name. == References ==