Robert Winston, Baron Winston

Television

Birthday July 15, 1940

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace London, England

Age 83 years old

Nationality London, England

#52356 Most Popular

1940

Robert Maurice Lipson Winston, Baron Winston, (born 15 July 1940) is a British professor, medical doctor, scientist, television presenter and Labour peer.

Robert Winston was born in London to Laurence Winston and Ruth Winston-Fox, and brought up as an Orthodox Jew.

His mother was Mayor of the former Borough of Southgate.

Winston's father died as a result of medical negligence when Winston was nine years old.

Robert has two younger siblings: a sister, the artist Willow Winston, and a brother, Anthony.

1964

Winston attended firstly Salcombe Preparatory School until the age of 7, followed by Colet Court and St Paul's School, later graduating from The London Hospital Medical College in 1964 with a degree in medicine and surgery and achieved prominence as an expert in human fertility.

1969

For a brief time he gave up clinical medicine and worked as a theatre director, winning the National Directors' Award at the Edinburgh Festival in 1969.

1970

Winston joined Hammersmith Hospital as a registrar in 1970 as a Wellcome Research Fellow.

1975

He became an associate professor at the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium in 1975.

He was a scientific advisor to the World Health Organisation's programme in human reproduction from 1975 to 1977.

1977

He joined the Royal Postgraduate Medical School (based at Hammersmith Hospital) as consultant and Reader in 1977.

1979

He performed the world's first fallopian tubal transplant in 1979 but this technology was later superseded by in vitro fertilisation.

1980

After conducting research as Professor of Gynaecology at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio in 1980, he returned to the UK to run the IVF service set up at Hammersmith Hospital which pioneered various improvements in this technology.

1990

Together with Alan Handyside in 1990, his research group pioneered the techniques of pre-implantation diagnosis, enabling screening of human embryos to prevent numerous genetic diseases.

1994

He was Director of NHS Research and Development at the Hammersmith Hospitals Trust until 1994.

As Professor of Fertility Studies at Hammersmith, Winston led the IVF team that pioneered pre-implantation genetic diagnosis to identify defects in human embryos, and published early work on gene expression in human embryos.

He developed tubal microsurgery and various techniques in reproductive surgery, including sterilisation reversal.

1997

He became Dean of the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in London until its merger with Imperial College in 1997.

This charitable trust, which has raised over £80 million for research into reproductive diseases, was renamed the Genesis Research Trust in 1997.

2001

From 2001 to 2018 he was Chancellor of Sheffield Hallam University.

Winston is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (FMedSci), an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (HonFREng), a Fellow of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (FRCOG) and of the Royal College of Physicians of London (FRCP), and is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons (FRCS Edin), Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons (FRCPS Glasg), and the Royal Society of Biology (FRSB).

He holds honorary doctorates from twenty-three universities.

He is a trustee of the UK Stem Cell Foundation.

He is a patron of The Liggins Institute, University of Auckland, New Zealand.

Winston holds strong views about the commercialisation of fertility treatment.

He believes that ineffective treatments result in great anguish to couples and is alarmed that so many treatments for the symptom of infertility are carried out before proper investigation and diagnosis has been made.

He is also sceptical about the effectiveness of current methods for screening human embryos to assess their viability.

Winston has called sex reassignment surgery "mutilation" and has said that "we can remove bits of our body and change our shape and so on but you can't change your sex because that is embedded in your genes in every cell of your body."

Winston was the presenter of many BBC television series, including Your Life in Their Hands, Making Babies, Superhuman, The Secret Life of Twins, Child of Our Time, Human Instinct, The Human Mind, Frontiers of Medicine and the BAFTA award-winner The Human Body.

As a traditional Jew with an orthodox background, he also presented The Story of God, exploring the development of religious beliefs and the status of faith in a scientific age.

He presented the BBC documentary Walking with Cavemen, a major BBC series that presented some controversial views about early man but was endorsed by leading anthropologists and scientists.

One theory was that Homo sapiens have a uniquely developed imagination that helped them to survive.

2004

He was the president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science from 2004 to 2005.

Together with Carol Readhead of the California Institute of Technology, Winston researched male germ cell stem cells and methods for their genetic modification at the Institute of Reproductive and Developmental Biology, Imperial College London.

He has published over 300 scientific papers in peer-reviewed journals.

He was appointed to a new chair at Imperial College – Professor of Science and Society – and is also emeritus professor of Fertility Studies there.

He was Chairman of the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Trust and chairs the Women-for-Women Appeal.

2005

Winston's documentary Threads of Life won the international science film prize in Paris in 2005.

His BBC series Child Against All Odds explored ethical questions raised by IVF treatment.

2008

In 2008, he presented Super Doctors, about decisions made every day in frontier medicine.