In 1912, McNeill was one of the local medical practitioners called to give evidence to a public committee, the membership of which included
Sir John Dewar MP and the
Marchioness of Tullibardine, which had been convened to look into the medical services in Orkney. In 1914, McNeill moved to
Leicester to take over the medical practice of her brother David, in order for him to join the
Royal Army Medical Corps. She remained there, working for part of the time in the Fever Hospital, until 1916 when she joined the
Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service. Her manuscript diaries, which are in the possession of the
Imperial War Museum, note that her service was in
Ostrovo and
Salonika, where she met
Prince Alexander of Serbia,
President Venizelos,
Flora Sandes and
King Constantine of Greece. McNeill worked there from October 1916 until May 1919, when she was transferred to
Belgrade. For her service in the
Balkans, McNeill was awarded the French medal
Médaille des Épidémies (en
vermeil) and the Serbian
Order of St Sava.
Elsie Inglis, founder of the Scottish Women's Hospitals, also received this medal. McNeill was also awarded the British War and Victory Medals. McNeill continued working in medicine abroad after the end of the First World War; firstly, in the
Scottish Mission Hospital in
Tiberias in what was then
Palestine, then in
India and finally
Uganda, where she was the first doctor at the hospital outpost in
Kamuli, Busogaland, established by the
Little Sisters of St Francis in 1914. During this period, she also travelled in Europe with her sister Margaret, and the pair had a private audience with
Pope Pius XI in 1925, and shortly after converted to Catholicism. On 10 June 1928, McNeill died of
typhoid fever at a remote mission station in Uganda. == Legacy ==