She began her research on pregnancy in about 1928 In 1968, she added proliferative retinopathy to the risk factors. This classification was widely adopted and allowed doctors to partially predict the course of a woman with diabetes during pregnancy and the chances of
newborn survival. When White began working at
Joslin, the fetal success rate was 54 percent; when she retired in 1974, it would be over 90 percent. During her 50 years of work, White managed the deliveries of over 2200 women with diabetes and the supervision of some 10,000 cases of type 1 diabetes. After her retirement, she kept in touch with colleagues and continued to be involved in the wider community of diabetics, chiefly through caring for and working on the emotional problems of young people with diabetes. She was the first woman to be invited to give the
Banting Memorial Lecture and to receive the Banting Medal, the highest scientific award of the
American Diabetes Association.
Hobart and William Smith College cited her as one of the twelve outstanding women physicians of the world. White died of a heart attack on December 16, 1989, in Ashland, Massachusetts. She was survived by her five dachshunds. == References ==