Notable staff and board members Some notable individuals connected to the history of the Children's Hospital are: • Sir
Lorimer Dods (1900–1981), paediatrician who founded, with assistance from Dr John G. Fulton and
Douglas Burrows, the
Children's Medical Research Foundation. was the President of the hospital's Board of Management from 1904 until 1932, can perhaps be called the father of the Children's Hospital and is sometimes also mentioned as one of the pioneers of Australian
orthopaedic surgery. Clubbe has a ward named after him. • Sir Robert Blakeway Wade (1874–1954), orthopaedic surgeon. A hospital building completed in 1939, Wade House, was named in his honour; it features pictures of Australian fauna drawn on many walls by artist
Pixie O'Harris. • Dr
Margaret Hilda Harper (1879–1964), paediatrician who discovered the difference between
coeliac disease and
cystic fibrosis of the
pancreas in 1930. • Sir
Norman Gregg (1892–1966),
ophthalmologist: the first person to identify
German measles as a cause for
congenital deformities. •
Rosa Angela Kirkcaldie CBE (1887–1972), charismatic matron 1922–1945 • Dr
Lindsay Dey (1886–1973),
paediatrician: President of the hospital's Board of Management from 1946 until 1959. • Dr
Frank Tidswell (1867–1941),
microbiologist: Director of Pathology from 1913 until 1941 • Dr. R.
Douglas Reye (1912–1977), fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians, after whom
Reye's syndrome was named, worked at the hospital from 1939 until his death. • Dr Marcel Sofer–Schreiber
MBBS Sydney, 1931 (1910–1994), paediatric neurosurgeon, led the way in Australia in the treatment of hydrocephalus, using the Spitz–Holter
shunt in the 1960s. He went on to train many doctors to carry out this procedure, thus saving the lives of countless babies, and leaving a lasting legacy. He published extensively on his specialty with papers on hydrocephalus, head injuries and spinal tumours. He was also the first surgeon to draw attention to the potentially deadly condition of
subdural haematoma in infants. •
Isobelle Mary Ferguson (1926–2019),
Aboriginal nurse and activist, the first known Aboriginal person to train at the hospital, completing her first year in 1945
Notable patient Notable individual connected to the history of the Children's Hospital are: •
Sophie Delezio (born 2001) – treated at the hospital after being badly injured in a car crash at two years old. She suffered burns to 85 per cent of her body but survived and was released from hospital six months later in June 2004. ==See also==