William McBride (doctor)

Birthday May 25, 1927

Birth Sign Gemini

DEATH DATE 2018-6-27, (91 years old)

Nationality Australia

#49074 Most Popular

1927

William Griffith McBride (25 May 1927 – 27 June 2018) was an Australian obstetrician.

He published a letter on the teratogenicity of thalidomide following the findings of a midwife named Pat Sparrow, which resulted in the reduction of the number of drugs prescribed during pregnancy.

Later in his life, McBride was involved in several trials with the pharma industry blaming him medical malpractice and scientific fraud for falsifying data in a paper that claimed that the drug Debendox was also responsible for birth defects.

McBride was born in Sydney, Australia.

1961

McBride published a letter in The Lancet, in December 1961, noting a large number of birth defects in children of patients who were prescribed thalidomide, after a midwife named Sister Pat Sparrow first suspected the drug was causing birth defects in the babies of patients under his care at Crown Street Women's Hospital in Sydney.

1962

McBride was nominated Man of the Year for 1962, a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (1969 Birthday Honours), Father of the Year (1972) and an Officer of the Order of Australia (1977 Silver Jubilee and Queen's Birthday Honours).

McBride had four children, one of whom is the soldier, lawyer, television presenter and whistleblower, David McBride.

1971

McBride was awarded a medal and prize money by L'Institut de la Vie, a prestigious French institute, in connection with his discovery, in 1971.

Using the prize money, he established Foundation 41, a Sydney-based medical research foundation concerned with the causes of birth defects.

Working with P H Huang, he proposed that thalidomide caused malformations by interacting with the DNA of the dividing embryonic cells.

This finding stimulated their experimentation, which showed that thalidomide may inhibit cell division in rapidly dividing cells of malignant tumors.

1981

In 1981, he published a paper indicating that the drug Debendox (marketed in the US as Bendectin) caused birth defects.

His co-authors noted that the published paper contained manipulated data and protested.

Multiple lawsuits were filed by patients.

1993

Eventually, the case was investigated and, as a result, McBride was struck off the Australian medical register in 1993 for deliberately falsifying data.

1998

He was reinstated to the medical register in 1998.

1999

This work was published in the journal "Pharmacology and Toxicology" in 1999 and has been rated in the top ten of the most important Australian medical discoveries.

McBride's involvement in the Debendox case is less illustrious.

2018

McBride died, aged 91, on 27 June 2018.