The doctor wearing the uniform of a captain in the
Royal Army Medical Corps who hired Hilda Woods was Major Greenwood, whose role in the development of medical statistics and epidemiology during the first half of the 20th century is well documented. From 1916 until 1933, Hilda Woods worked alongside Greenwood. Woods was initially employed until the end of 1919 to enable Greenwood and Woods (1919) to co-author ‘A report on the incidence of industrial accidents upon individuals with special reference to multiple accidents’, which was highly cited. In February 1928, Greenwood and Woods transferred to the Division of Epidemiology and Vital Statistics at the LSHTM. Woods was appointed as Assistant Lecturer on the permanent staff of the
University of London, the first female lecturer at the LSHTM. As well as giving lectures on epidemiology and vital statistics to medical postgraduates taking the Diploma in Public Health course, she had responsibility for the practical classes. While at the LSHTM, Hilda Woods published papers on respiratory disease (Woods, 1927, 1928a),
scarlet fever and
diphtheria (Woods, 1928b), as well as a methodological paper (Woods, 1929) that compared analytic and graphical methods for interpolation in life tables. In Greenwood's Divisional report for 1933, Woods' last year at the LSHTM, he described Dr. Hilda M Woods’“Epidemiological Study of Scarlet Fever in
England and Wales since 1900”, as the Division’s most important paper. Hilda Woods's tenure at the LSHTM came to an end in 1933 following her engagement to Roger Fowke, a prominent businessman in Ceylon, where she was married. Having lost her fiancé 18 years earlier, Hilda Woods suffered yet another tragic loss when her husband, aged 53 years, died suddenly, from septicaemia, in February 1934 two months into their marriage. Many would have returned home in despair, but Woods immersed herself in important medical and social services of various kinds in Ceylon: as a member of the 1934 Ceylon Government Commission to study factory conditions and to advise on a new Factory Act. Also in 1934 she helped to compile and draft, as part of the Ceylon* Government Commission on Malaria, a statistical report on the epidemic. Both appointments led to reports tabled in the British and Ceylon Parliaments. Hilda Fowke also organized temporary hospitals during the height of the malaria epidemic and later organized a new department for studying disease prevalences in Ceylon. ==Publications==