Early medical career Following his graduation, Morrow was appointed as a junior resident medical officer at
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and from 1932 was the deputy clinical superintendent. In 1933, he gained membership of the
Royal College of Physicians.
War service Morrow was commissioned as a
captain with the
Australian Army Medical Corps in 1929. Early in the
Second World War he joined the
Australian Imperial Force and as a
lieutenant colonel he was placed in command of a medical division in the Middle East. After the German
invasion of Greece in 1941 he served in
Crete and Egypt. From 1942, until the end of the war, Morrow served in
Katherine, Northern Territory, and
Melbourne and he visited operational areas in
New Guinea,
New Britain,
Bougainville and
Borneo. He was promoted to temporary
colonel and awarded the
Distinguished Service Order and
mentioned in dispatches.
Later medical career Morrow rejoined Royal Prince Alfred Hospital as an honorary assistant-physician and was appointed an honorary physician in 1952. He became a consultant physician there in 1963 and also at the
Concord Repatriation General Hospital,
Canterbury Hospital and the now closed Marrickville and Western Suburbs hospitals. He lectured in therapeutics and chaired the Postgraduate Committee of Medicine at the University of Sydney. Morrow was the foundation president of the Gastroenterological Society of Australia in 1958.
College of Physicians In 1938, Morrow was appointed a foundation member of the
Royal Australasian College of Physicians and served as a member of the board of censors for 16 years and as its censor-in-chief from 1962 until 1966. He was elected president of the college in 1966 and served in that position until 1968. ==Personal life==