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R. G. Ferguson

Robert George Ferguson, OBE, (12 September 1883 – 1964) was a pioneer in North America's fight against tuberculosis who worked for the introduction of free medical treatment.[1][2]

Dr. R.G. Ferguson
Born(1883-09-12)12 September 1883
Died1964 (aged 80–81)
Alma materWesley College, Manitoba Medical College

As Medical Director, and later as General Superintendent of the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League Canada, he achieved many firsts for the province, including:

  • 1921, provincial survey of school children: 54% of non-Indigenous children and 92.5% of Indigenous children had positive reactions to tuberculin tests indicating infection or exposure[3]
  • 1929, First province in Canada to provide free treatment of tuberculosis.[4]
  • First province to initiate a vaccination program for its sanatorium personnel (student nurses, 1938) and the First Nations population (infants, 1930).[5][3]
  • 1941–1947, First province to conduct province-wide tuberculosis surveys[5][6]

Furthermore, Ferguson was a pioneer in long-term BCG vaccine research, quite controversial at the time.[3][7][8]

Biography edit

Robert George Ferguson was born on 12 September 1883 to Robert Ferguson and Margaret Jane Fisher. The couple had moved from Kincardine township in Ontario, Canada to North Dakota, USA in 1881, in part due to concerns about Margaret's health. Her family had a history of tuberculosis.[1]: 13–14  At the time of R.G.'s birth, the family lived on a farm near Joliette, North Dakota.[9]

In 1902, Robert sent George to Canada to look for a possible land purchase. After traveling to Winnipeg, Calgary and Edmonton, George recommended the purchase of already cultivated land near downtown Yorkton, a town by a railway line. On his recommendation, Robert purchased three quarter sections of land (the east half of section 27, and the northeast quarter of section 22, township 25, range 4) on July 21, 1902. The following summer, in 1903, the family moved to the homestead near Yorkton, Saskatchewan, Canada.[1]: 17 

George's education was intermittent, with some periods of winter schooling interspersed with farm work, farm management and homesteading. He passed his grade 8 exams at age 15, after 3 years of absence. In 1904, at age 20, he began attending Wesley College in Winnipeg, with the goal of high school matriculation (grades 9–12). Following his father's death in 1906, he returned to school to complete his course of studies.[1]: 18 

 
Dr. R.G. Ferguson, 1916, "Senior Stick", University of Manitoba

At first Ferguson planned a career in the Church. He carried out mission field work in Alberta in 1908 and 1912. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1910, with a Bronze Medal in Arts, and was selected Senior Stick by classmates. However, his voice was not considered strong enough to support preaching, and in 1912, he enrolled in the Manitoba College of Medicine.[1]: 19–20  In 1915, while still a student, he briefly took over the administration of the Manitoba Tuberculosis Sanatorium in Ninette, Manitoba for David Alexander Stewart.[1]: 29  In his final year of medical school Ferguson worked part-time in the laboratory of S. J. S. Pierce, making typhoid vaccine for the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF).[1]: 21  In 1916 Ferguson graduated second in his class in medicine, earning another Bronze Medal.[1]: 19–20  Ferguson's post-graduate work included training at the London Hospital in England, and at Harvard School of Medicine, Harvard University.[10][needs independent confirmation]

His two youngest brothers, Vernon and Frank had by then enrolled at the same University and subsequently left school to join the CEF. Vernon joined in 1915 and was wounded at Ypres as a member of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Highland Light Infantry. He received the Mons Star, contracted tuberculosis and died in 1930.[citation needed] His youngest brother Frank was discharged from the CEF and joined No. 87 Squadron RAF. Frank flew a Sopwith Dolphin and was shot down by Bavarian Ace, Michael Hutterer, near the German-Canadian lines (Marcoyne) on the evening of September 3, 1918. Hutterer was a member of Jagdstaffel 23. Second Lt. Frank Ferguson is buried at Arras Road Cemetery near Roclincourt, France.[11]

 
RG Ferguson and wife Helen with Margaret, Robert, Sheelagh, David, Patricia, and Helen ("Honey") outside the family cottage at Echo Lake in the Qu`Àppelle Valley, July 1940.

Ferguson married Helen Ross of Wynyard, Saskatchewan on July 5, 1916, after a four-year engagement.[1]: 21–22  They had seven children: Robert Ross, Helen (Hart), Margaret (Love, later Fallis), Patricia (Motherwell, later Dyck), Sheelagh (Barrable), John Vincent, and David. John Vincent (Jackie), twin of Sheelagh, died in infancy, on December 9, 1925.[1]: 149–150 [12]

In 1929 RG Ferguson wrote, The Wood Fairies' Christmas Deed for his 6 surviving children. In 2014 this story was published, made available via Amazon with proceeds donated to the Lung Association of Saskatchewan. A short animated feature of the story was filmed and uploaded to YouTube.[13] Ferguson's wife Helen was also an accomplished artist which is detailed in her biography, Her Legacy: The Life and Art of Helen FJ Ross Ferguson (Amazon).

RG Ferguson's children Robert Ross Ferguson, Sheelagh and David served in the Royal Canadian Air Force during the second world war.[11] His son in law, Major John Vernon (Jack) Love of Yorkton, Saskatchewan, was killed leading D company of the Regina Rifles Regiment onto Juno Beach at Normandy France, June 6, 1944 (D-Day). Jack Love is buried in Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery.[14] His granddaughter, Sheelagh Cooper (nee Barrable), an entrepreneur and social activist, also received the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in King Charles III first New years Honours list in 2023. https://tnnbda.com/his-majesty-the-kings-new-years-honours-list-2023/

Medical career edit

Following graduation Ferguson worked under A. B. Alexander in the Acute Infection Hospital and others in Winnipeg as Assistant Medical Superintendent, replacing Alvin Trotter Mathers. In June 1917, he was hired by Maurice Macdonald Seymour[3] to become the acting medical superintendent of the new Fort Qu'Appelle Sanatorium, which was opened on October 10, 1917.[1]: 22  Conditions during the war had fostered both the spread of tuberculosis among soldiers and its detection. In response, the federal government provided new funding towards the completion of the sanatorium and the treatment of returning soldiers.[15] Ferguson initially expected to be replaced within a few months by Lieutenant-Colonel William Malloch Hart, who had done much of the initial organization of the sanatorium before enlisting in the Canadian Army Medical Corps. Hart, however, submitted an official letter of resignation in November 1919, opening the way for Ferguson to become the permanent medical superintendent.[1]: 47–48 [16]

Ferguson remained at "Fort San" for 31 years. He was a skilled administrator with a knowledge of economics and the ability to analyze the dire challenge presented by rampant tuberculosis infection in the community.[1]: 43–44  In 1917 the Province of Saskatchewan had the nation's highest incidence of tuberculosis with an annual death rate of 400 cases for a population of 700,000 people (57 deaths per 100,000 people). Another 1000 people per year were estimated to "break down" with the disease, and far more were infected and became contagious, often before realizing that they were ill.[1]: 42  Native populations were (and continue to be) particularly affected,[17] as was documented by Peter Bryce as early as the 1900s,[18] and again by Ferguson himself.[19]

Ferguson saw quickly that the only way to break the recurrent cycle of exposure, illness and death was to provide diagnosis, treatment and hospitalization at no cost to the patient. This was a huge political challenge. Ferguson persisted in his efforts, working patiently to gain support from people with tuberculosis, the public, members of the medical profession, and, last but not least, politicians, throughout his career.[1] Ferguson recognized that education was an essential step: he saw the need to develop broad public understanding of tuberculosis disease transmission and support for measures to reduce it.[20]

As one of three members appointed by the Provincial Government to form the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission in 1921 he wrote the entire report.[21] Nineteen of the report's 22 recommendations were implemented. Chief among them was making the cost of diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis a public responsibility. Upon Ferguson's death in 1964 then Saskatchewan Minister of Health Minister Allan Blakeney said, "The introduction of diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis at public expense was one of the early and essential steps in developing a program of health services for all."[2][22]

Ferguson painstakingly reviewed the available records relating to illness among First Nations peoples in the Fort Qu'Appelle and File Hill areas and identified a series of epidemics related to increasing contact with the incoming white population. These included pertussis (1887), measles (1890, 1898) and influenza (1890, 1918–1919) in addition to tuberculosis.[1]: 90–91  He actively investigated changes in resistance and related factors as possible explanations for the lack of resistance to disease displayed by First Nations populations. The patterns he saw in his data suggested that resettlement in houses and on reserves was followed by an epidemic rise in tuberculosis cases affecting the entire native population. Deaths peaked in 1886 with 9,000 deaths per 100,000 people, and then dropped, to 3,000 (1895), 2,000 (1901) and 1,000 (1907) deaths per 100,000 people. This suggested the arrival of a disease in a susceptible population, followed by decreasing rates as more resistant individuals survived.[1]: 90–92 [23] Ferguson did not hesitate to relate such illness in First Nations people to the widespread physical, economic and social changes that were impacting them.[1]: 94–95  In October 1928 Ferguson gave a landmark presentation entitled "Tuberculosis Among the Indians of the Great Canadian Plains" at the 14th Annual Conference of the National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis at British Medical House, London.[24] It established him as an international authority on tuberculosis. Later on the same trip he attended the Council of the International Union Against TB where the double barred cross of Lorena was adopted as a symbol of the worldwide fight against tuberculosis.[25]

A further achievement in 1928 was integration of the native population into the sanatorium. Saskatchewan, under Ferguson's guidance, was the first province by eight years to fully integrate the native population into sanatoria. Previously they were segregated.

Ferguson found an ally in incoming Premier James G. Gardiner, and on 1 January 1929 the Saskatchewan Sanatoria & Hospitals Act was passed. Saskatchewan became the first province in Canada to make tuberculosis treatment free to all who needed it.[1]: 82  As of 1930, Ferguson became director of medical services and general superintendent for all three of the Saskatchewan sanatoria (Fort Qu'Appelle, opened in 1917; Saskatoon, 1925; Prince Albert, 1930). T. W. Hamilton took over the post of medical superintendent at Fort San from 1930–1946.[26]

BCG Research edit

At the time Ferguson began his career at Fort Qu'Appelle, BCG vaccination was controversial. The idea of introducing live tubercle into the human body was considered dubious from perspectives of both health and morality. This grew to a fever pitch in 1930 when 249 infants in Lübeck, Germany were vaccinated with a vaccine which was supposedly BCG but which turned out to be contaminated with virulent tubercle bacillus. Seventy one infants died of tuberculosis as a result. Ferguson initially expressed concern over the proposal to test the BCG vaccine, writing in a private letter to the President of the National Research Council, on 3 January 1931:[19] [27]

"I feel it would be unwise to initiate human experimental work among Indian children who are direct wards of the Government, and for which reason they are not in a position to exercise voluntary cooperation. Furthermore in case of difficulties arising the Government itself, could not be without responsibility."[19]

Nonetheless, the reality in 1926 was that Indigenous people were ten times more likely than non-indigenous to die from tuberculosis. Ferguson's testing of indigenous students at File Hills and Qu'Appelle showed that 92% of the students tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis, compared to 54% of students in the non-indigenous population. Ferguson achieved substantial decreases in tuberculosis-related deaths through the work of visiting nurses, the isolation and hospitalization of active tuberculosis cases, and measures to improve living conditions, housing, water, and diet. Vaccination offered the hope of improving the odds even more for the most-at-risk patients, infants.[3] By 1932, Ferguson felt that a test of BCG vaccine was justified. He was so convinced of the value of BCG vaccination that to prove its safety he vaccinated his own children before vaccinating anyone else.[28]

In 1932 Ferguson received approval to begin BCG vaccination of newborn infants in the Fort Qu'Appelle Health Unit, and an increase in his annual National Research Council (NRC) grant for BCG research which, remarkably, was renewed for 21 consecutive years. Ferguson collaborated on this work with Austin Simes, a former classmate[28] who became medical superintendent of the Qu'Appelle Indian Health Unit in 1929.[29] Over a 12-year period Ferguson and Simes vaccinated over 600 First Nation newborns in a semi-randomized manner with followup throughout the period of the study. Families were paired in terms of socio-economic factors such as housing and sanitation to ensure that the vaccinated and unvaccinated groups were as comparable as possible.[30][31]

Although their assignment of infants to trials might not meet a modern standard of "randomization", the Panel on Tuberculosis of the NRC Associate Committee on Medical Research in 1949 recognized Ferguson's and Simes's study as "the most scientific trial of BCG yet made".[28][31] BCG vaccination was found to be highly protective,[32] with a vaccine efficacy of 67%. Ferguson and Simes' work continues to be cited as a well-designed and rigorous study of the effectiveness of BCG vaccine against pulmonary and pleural TB.[30][33]

Ferguson also took steps to document and address the issue of illness among nurses. Nurses working with tuberculor patients were at extremely high risk for contracting the disease. By using BCG vaccine to vaccinate student nurses, he was able to reduce the incidence of tuberculosis among student nurses from 5% to less than 1%.[15][34]

Ferguson's "elegant studies"[35] suggested that immunity took time to fully mature: as much as 18 months after an initial exposure. During that time, each successive exposure contributed to the cumulative risk for infection, one reason why it was so important to segregate active cases from those who were not yet ill.[35][36]

Socio-economic conditions edit

With their National Research Council funding, Ferguson and Simes were able to carry out a long-term study of families of equal status with respect to living, social and economic conditions likely to impact health outcomes. This enabled them to examine both the impact of BCG vaccination, and the role of socio-economic factors.[28][31] Ferguson's work in the 1930s and 1940s demonstrated, for the first time, that due to the number of deaths among vaccinated infants which were not related to tuberculosis, "poverty, not tuberculosis, was the greatest threat to Native infants."[37] Further, based on his research, Ferguson recognized that

The obvious conditions facilitating the progress of the epidemic and the spread of infection at this time were the concentration of the Indians in fixed residences on the reserves, lack of sanitation, their contact with the surrounding white settlers, and the concentration of the children in boarding schools for education. Under these conditions tuberculosis infection spread quickly.[38]

Ferguson considered Indian Residential schools to be a battleground in the fight against tuberculosis. From 1933–37 he sent out the travelling clinic of the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League to residential schools throughout Saskatchewan to examine Native children, documenting conditions in the schools. Ferguson also advocated for the conversion of selected Residential schools into tuberculosis sanitoria, so that the sick children could be separated from the healthy to decrease the extremely high infection rates in the schools. In 1937 the Ministry of Indian Affairs introduced drastic funding cuts to medical care, explicitly targeting both tuberculosis funding and the provision of hospital care and drug treatments to Native people. Ferguson sent an angry letter to the Minister, Harold Wigmore McGill, protesting the cuts and warning the Government that some of the worst conditions were to be found in Duck Lake, Saskatchewan in Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King's own riding of Prince Albert.[19] Funding was restored and increased in subsequent years, but the request to convert a residential school into a tuberculosis hospital was ignored, leaving students with active tuberculosis in residential schools as wards of the government.[3]

Photoradiography edit

Beginning in the 1920s, Ferguson worked with photographer Robert S. Connell and his brother James. The brothers developed methods to photograph radiographic images, and travelled to communities and schools with a portable generator and x-ray machine to screen people for tuberculosis. This included flying to remote areas such as Lac la Ronge and Beauval. By the 1940s, radiography was being used as a standard technique for detecting both tubercular and cancer cases when new patients entered hospital.[29] Mass x-ray surveys were carried out at the community level in Melville in 1941 and provincewide by August 1947.[26]

Ferguson retired in September 1948, at age 65, and was succeeded by John Orr as director of medical services for all three sanatoria.[26] Ferguson spent the next few years writing Studies in Tuberculosis (1955).[36] The 1940s and 1950s brought the discovery of newly-developed antibiotics.[39] The combination of the tactics of detection, isolation and treatment that Ferguson had advocated with powerful new drugs began to empty the sanatoria.[19] The Prince Albert San ceased to treat tuberculosis patients in 1961; Fort San in 1972; and the Saskatoon San in 1978.[26]

Legacy edit

Statistics alone provide evidence of R.G. Ferguson's lasting impact on the fight against tuberculosis. In 1917 the Province of Saskatchewan recorded a rate of incidence of 50 per 100,000 of population. The death rate for Saskatchewan's First Nations infants in their first year was even more appalling: in 1936 it was still 1,603 per 100,000. By 1948, the year Ferguson retired, the death rate was down to 17 per 100,000. These impressive numbers are the result of Ferguson's two-pronged attack. First, he established access to free diagnosis and treatment, and second, he established BCG as a safe and effective vaccination.[28]

Statistics alone, however, do not measure Ferguson's full influence on public health policy. He charted a course that would not only guide the direction of treatment of tuberculosis, but that would inspire health coverage plans across the country for generations. In 1935, one of his contemporaries Norman Bethune, who himself had contracted tuberculosis, attempted unsuccessfully to organize a Montreal Group and extend this concept and introduce a free health care system across Canada.[6]

 
Dr. R.G. Ferguson, Sept 1948, Dr. JM Uhrich, Dr. RG Ferguson, Premier TC Douglas, Dr. F. Munroe, All Ministers of Health during Dr. Ferguson's career.

On his retirement in 1948, the person voted through the English language branch of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to be "the Greatest Canadian", T.C. Tommy Douglas, who had been both Premier and Minister of Public Health from 1944–48, said of Ferguson:

"Not before in the history of this province has there been such a universal expression of regard for one man. Few men have the opportunity in their lifetime to give such service as Dr Ferguson has to his generation and to his age. Still fewer would be so successful in rising to the opportunity.”[40]

Paradoxically, Ferguson's legacy was articulated as early as 1917 in his speech on the opening of the Fort Qu'Appelle Sanitorium:

"When we think of the future of this institution we do not think of its building and equipment, but rather of an idea, a force, a group of associations and a locality with its hopeful traditions, glowing with prestige and confidence in the cure of the disease. We would like to think of it as a medical centre, where is available every facility for the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis, where a sick man may get every chance to regain his broken health and return to a sphere of usefulness as a citizen. We want it to be an educational centre where the facts about a disease are being accumulated for public use; a centre where sufferers may come to get an education in regard to a disease, may learn its cure and prevention. Last of all, we want it to have the atmosphere of a home where those who have fallen ill with the disease may come to rest and receive the encouragement and direction necessary to win a hard fight."[41]

It is testimony to his vision and tenacity that he achieved exactly what he set out to achieve.

Organizations edit

Awards and honours edit

In recognition of his achievements in the fight against tuberculosis, Ferguson received many awards and honours, including:

  • The Order of the British Empire (Civil), 1935, as "George Ferguson", "For services in connection with the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis in the Dominion of Canada."[42][45][46]
  • The King's Medallion (Silver Jubilee of King George V, 1935)[42]
  • The Charles Mickle Fellowship, (1961) awarded by the University of Toronto to the person judged by the University to have done the most to advance medical art or medicine over the previous 10 years[10]
  • Honorary Doctor of Laws, University of Saskatchewan (1946)[47]
  • Honorary Life Memberships in the:
 
Dr. R.G. Ferguson, May 1935, Muskeke-O-Kemacan Ketche-na-na-ta we wayo, – "Great White Medicine Man"

In 1935, Ferguson was named honorary chief of the three bands of the Qu'Appelle Valley (Muscowpetung, Piapot and Pasqua), and given the Cree name "Muskeke-O-Kemacan Ketche-na-na-ta we wayo" or "Great White Physician".[50][15]

 
Dr. Ferguson and Dr. Boughton with a group of ex-service patients, waiting for the arrival of their Majesties King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in June, 1939.

On June 3, 1939, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited the Sanatorium at Saskatoon where they were met by Ferguson and Veterans of the First World War who had also survived tuberculosis.[22] In 1944, the Governor General of Canada, Alexander Cambridge, 1st Earl of Athlone and his wife Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone were dinner guests of the Fergusons while visiting the San at Fort Qu'Appelle.[51]

Further recognition of Ferguson's achievements came in the form of the establishment of the Dr. R.G. Ferguson Professorship (1973) at the University of Saskatchewan;[52] the Dr. George Ferguson School (Prek to Grade 8) in Regina, Saskatchewan[53] (1969), and Ferguson Island, Saskatchewan.[15]

Bibliography edit

  • Ferguson, RG (1955). Studies in Tuberculosis. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.[54]
  • Ferguson, RG; Simes, AB (January 1949). "BCG vaccination of Indian infants in Saskatchewan". Tubercle. 30 (1): 5–11. doi:10.1016/s0041-3879(49)80055-9. PMID 18102809.
  • Ferguson, RG; Simes, AB (31 December 1941). Vaccination of Indian children with BCG in Saskatchewan. Report to the Committee on Tuberculosis of the National Research Council. (unpublished).
  • Ferguson, RG (1928). Tuberculosis among the Indians of the Great Canadian plains. London: Adlard and Son.
  • Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission (1922). Report of the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission (PDF). Regina, Sask.: J. W. Reid, King's Printer. OCLC 879286773.
  • Ferguson, RG (2014). The Wood Fairies' Christmas Deed. Heyden & Son, Incorporated. ISBN 978-0994001108.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Houston, C. Stuart (Clarence Stuart) (1991). R. G. Ferguson: Crusader against Tuberculosis. Toronto and Oxford: Hannah Institute and Dundurn Press.
  2. ^ a b Houston, C. Stuart (2002). Steps on the Road to Medicare: Why Saskatchewan Led the Way. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 55. ISBN 9780773525504.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Niessen, Shuana (2017). Shattering the Silence: The Hidden History of Indian Residential Schools in Saskatchewan (PDF). Regina, Saskatchewan: Faculty of Education, University of Regina. ISBN 9780773107502.
  4. ^ "Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League". Lung Saskatchewan. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  5. ^ a b Houston, C. Stuart (December 9, 2013). "Robert George Ferguson". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  6. ^ a b Canadian Medical Association Journal April 18, 1964, Vol.90.
  7. ^ Grzybowski, S; Allen, EA (6 April 1999). "Tuberculosis: 2. History of the disease in Canada". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 160 (7): 1025–8. PMC 1230197. PMID 10207344.
  8. ^ Seagle, Joseph B. (1 March 1955). "A review of BCG and other antituberculosis vaccines". The Journal of Pediatrics. 46 (3): 337–347. doi:10.1016/S0022-3476(55)80294-6. ISSN 0022-3476. PMID 14354594. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  9. ^ "Ferguson, Robert George (1883– 1964)". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  10. ^ a b "Canadian Journal of Public Health". Canadian Public Health Association – Milestones in Public Health. 52. 1961. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  11. ^ a b "Frank Willard Ferguson – The Canadian Virtual War Memorial – Veterans Affairs Canada". Veterans Affairs Canada. 20 February 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  12. ^ "Remembering the life of Robert Ferguson". Regina Leader Post. September 22, 2006. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  13. ^ "Dr. George Ferguson Book Launch Nov 14, 2014". Lung Saskatchewan. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  14. ^ Canada, Veterans Affairs (20 February 2019). "John Vernon Love – The Canadian Virtual War Memorial". Veterans Affairs Canada. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Houston, C. Stuart; Massie, Merle (1 October 2013). 36 Steps on the Road to Medicare: How Saskatchewan Led the Way. Montreal, Quebec: McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-8958-2. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  16. ^ Parfitt, Charles D. (1923). "Lieutenant-Colonel William Malloch Hart". Trans Am Climatol Clin Assoc. 39: xxii–xxv. PMC 2262431.
  17. ^ Hick, Sarah (June 2019). "The Enduring Plague: How Tuberculosis in Canadian Indigenous Communities is Emblematic of a Greater Failure in Healthcare Equality". Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health. 9 (2): 89–92. doi:10.2991/jegh.k.190314.002. PMC 7310753. PMID 31241864.
  18. ^ Sproule-Jones, Megan (October 1996). "Crusading for the Forgotten: Dr. Peter Bryce, Public Health, and Prairie Native Residential Schools". Canadian Bulletin of Medical History. 13 (2): 199–224. doi:10.3138/cbmh.13.2.199. ISSN 0823-2105. PMID 11620073.
  19. ^ a b c d e Lux, Maureen (October 1998). "Perfect Subjects: Race, Tuberculosis, and the Qu'Appelle BCG Vaccine Trial". Canadian Bulletin of Medical History. 15 (2): 277–295. doi:10.3138/cbmh.15.2.277. ISSN 0823-2105. PMID 11624067.
  20. ^ FERGUSON, R. G. (1935). "Activities in a Province-Wide Programme for the Control of Tuberculosis". Canadian Public Health Journal. 26 (3): 130–137. ISSN 0319-2652. JSTOR 41977200.
  21. ^ Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission (1922). Report of the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission. Regina: J. W. Reid, King's Printer. pp. 94 (some folded). OCLC 879286773.
  22. ^ a b "Tribute issue to Dr. Robert George Ferguson". The Valley Echo. Vol. XLV, no. 3. 1964.
  23. ^ Ackley, Sarah F.; Liu, Fengchen; Porco, Travis C.; Pepperell, Caitlin S. (24 September 2015). "Modeling historical tuberculosis epidemics among Canadian First Nations: effects of malnutrition and genetic variation". PeerJ. 3: e1237. doi:10.7717/peerj.1237. PMC 4586807. PMID 26421237.
  24. ^ Ferguson, R. G. (1928). "Tuberculosis among the Indians of the Great Canadian Plains". Trans. Fourteenth Annual Conference of the National Assoc. for the Prevention of Tuberculosis at the Great Hall, British Medical House, October 15th and 16th 1928, Fourteenth Annual Conference (London, England). p. 51.
  25. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-10-03. Retrieved 2011-02-17.
  26. ^ a b c d "Tuberculosis Control". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  27. ^ Luca, S; Mihaescu, T (March 2013). "History of BCG Vaccine". Maedica. 8 (1): 53–8. PMC 3749764. PMID 24023600.
  28. ^ a b c d e Houston, CS (February 1993). "Ferguson's BCG research—Canada's first randomized clinical trial?". Clinical and Investigative Medicine. 16 (1): 89–91. PMID 8467583.
  29. ^ a b "Peel 7438: Broderick, Jeanette, Scenes of home and abroad: Xmas 1938 (1938)". peel.library.ualberta.ca. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  30. ^ a b de Gijsel, David; von Reyn, C. Fordham (1 March 2019). "A Breath of Fresh Air: BCG Prevents Adult Pulmonary Tuberculosis". International Journal of Infectious Diseases. 80: S6–S8. doi:10.1016/j.ijid.2019.02.036. ISSN 1201-9712. PMID 30822546. S2CID 73492753.
  31. ^ a b c Ferguson, RG; Simes, AB (1 January 1949). "BCG vaccination of Indian infants in Saskatchewan: A study carried out with financial assistance from the National Research Council of Canada". Tubercle. 30 (1): 5–11. doi:10.1016/S0041-3879(49)80055-9. ISSN 0041-3879. PMID 18102809. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  32. ^ Waldram, James Burgess; Herring, Ann; Young, T. Kue (1 January 2006). Aboriginal Health in Canada: Historical, Cultural, and Epidemiological Perspectives. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-8579-5. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  33. ^ Mangtani, Punam; Abubakar, Ibrahim; Ariti, Cono; Beynon, Rebecca; Pimpin, Laura; Fine, Paul E. M.; Rodrigues, Laura C.; Smith, Peter G.; Lipman, Marc; Whiting, Penny F.; Sterne, Jonathan A. (15 February 2014). "Protection by BCG Vaccine Against Tuberculosis: A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials". Clinical Infectious Diseases. 58 (4): 470–480. doi:10.1093/cid/cit790. PMID 24336911. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  34. ^ Preas, Sally (1947). "BCG Vaccination against Tuberculosis" (PDF). The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. 25 (2): 215–222. doi:10.2307/3348183. JSTOR 3348183. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  35. ^ a b Long, Richard; Divangahi, Maziar; Schwartzman, Kevin (24 March 2022). "Chapter 2: Transmission and pathogenesis of tuberculosis". Canadian Journal of Respiratory, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine. 6 (sup1): 22–32. doi:10.1080/24745332.2022.2035540. ISSN 2474-5332. S2CID 247716360.
  36. ^ a b Long, R.; Lau, A. (1 October 2016). "How R G Ferguson's groundbreaking studies influenced our understanding of tuberculosis reinfection. Where to next?". The International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease. 20 (10): 1285–1287. doi:10.5588/ijtld.16.0447. PMID 27725035. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  37. ^ Jones, Esyllt; MacDougall, Heather; Monnais, Laurence; Hanley, James; Carstairs, Catherine (29 April 2021). "Beyond the COVID-19 crisis: building on lost opportunities in the history of public health". FACETS. 6: 614–639. doi:10.1139/facets-2021-0002. S2CID 235551443.
  38. ^ Ferguson, R.G. (1955). Studies in Tuberculosis. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 6.
  39. ^ Iseman, M. D. (1 July 2002). "Tuberculosis therapy: past, present and future". European Respiratory Journal. 20 (36 suppl): 87S–94s. doi:10.1183/09031936.02.00309102. ISSN 0903-1936. PMID 12168751. S2CID 16498788. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  40. ^ The Valley Echo, Vol. XXIX No. 9. Pg. 5. September 1948.
  41. ^ Valley Echo [volume 45(3), page 3] quoted by the Canadian Lung Association.
  42. ^ a b c "Our New President". Bulletin of the Canadian Tuberculosis Association. 13 (4). Canadian Tuberculosis Association.: 1 1935.
  43. ^ OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION No.15 REPORTS OF EXPERT COMMITTEES TO THE EXECUTIVE BOARD (PDF). Geneva: WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION. April 1949. pp. 9–10.
  44. ^ OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION No.24 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR-GENERAL TO THE WORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLY AND TO THE UNITED NATIONS 1949 (PDF). Geneva: WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION. 1950. p. 86.
  45. ^ Acts of the Parliament of Canada (17th Parliament, 6th Session, Chapter 1–66), 1935. Ottawa: Brown Chamberlin, Law Printer to the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty. 1935. p. xiii. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  46. ^ "MBE (Civil) Awarded to Canadians 1934–1935" (PDF). www.blatherwick.net.
  47. ^ "Honorary Degrees". University of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  48. ^ a b c Roth, F. B.; Martin, G. K.; Brown, W. G. (1961). "ANNUAL REPORT OF THE ASSOCIATION 1960–61: PART III". Canadian Journal of Public Health. 52 (8): 343–351. ISSN 0008-4263. JSTOR 41983337.
  49. ^ "Dr. Ferguson's Canadian Tuberculosis Association membership". Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  50. ^ "Scroll naming Dr. Ferguson an Indian Chief". Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  51. ^ "Press Clippings" (PDF). 1944. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  52. ^ Cockcroft, DW (July 2015). "Respiratory medicine in Saskatchewan: An historical perspective". Canadian Respiratory Journal. 22 (4): 197–8. doi:10.1155/2015/932857. PMC 4530849. PMID 26252531.
  53. ^ McNinch, James (2022). "PARENT TEACHER HOME VISITS INITIATIVE – Final Report" (PDF). Saskatchewan School Board. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  54. ^ Long, R (November 2015). "Making a timely diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis". Canadian Respiratory Journal. 22 (6): 317–21. doi:10.1155/2015/826035. PMC 4676393. PMID 26469154.

ferguson, robert, george, ferguson, september, 1883, 1964, pioneer, north, america, fight, against, tuberculosis, worked, introduction, free, medical, treatment, fergusonborn, 1883, september, 1883joliette, north, dakotadied1964, aged, alma, materwesley, colle. Robert George Ferguson OBE 12 September 1883 1964 was a pioneer in North America s fight against tuberculosis who worked for the introduction of free medical treatment 1 2 Dr R G FergusonBorn 1883 09 12 12 September 1883Joliette North DakotaDied1964 aged 80 81 Alma materWesley College Manitoba Medical College As Medical Director and later as General Superintendent of the Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis League Canada he achieved many firsts for the province including 1921 provincial survey of school children 54 of non Indigenous children and 92 5 of Indigenous children had positive reactions to tuberculin tests indicating infection or exposure 3 1929 First province in Canada to provide free treatment of tuberculosis 4 First province to initiate a vaccination program for its sanatorium personnel student nurses 1938 and the First Nations population infants 1930 5 3 1941 1947 First province to conduct province wide tuberculosis surveys 5 6 Furthermore Ferguson was a pioneer in long term BCG vaccine research quite controversial at the time 3 7 8 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Medical career 1 2 BCG Research 1 3 Socio economic conditions 1 4 Photoradiography 1 5 Legacy 2 Organizations 3 Awards and honours 4 Bibliography 5 ReferencesBiography editRobert George Ferguson was born on 12 September 1883 to Robert Ferguson and Margaret Jane Fisher The couple had moved from Kincardine township in Ontario Canada to North Dakota USA in 1881 in part due to concerns about Margaret s health Her family had a history of tuberculosis 1 13 14 At the time of R G s birth the family lived on a farm near Joliette North Dakota 9 In 1902 Robert sent George to Canada to look for a possible land purchase After traveling to Winnipeg Calgary and Edmonton George recommended the purchase of already cultivated land near downtown Yorkton a town by a railway line On his recommendation Robert purchased three quarter sections of land the east half of section 27 and the northeast quarter of section 22 township 25 range 4 on July 21 1902 The following summer in 1903 the family moved to the homestead near Yorkton Saskatchewan Canada 1 17 George s education was intermittent with some periods of winter schooling interspersed with farm work farm management and homesteading He passed his grade 8 exams at age 15 after 3 years of absence In 1904 at age 20 he began attending Wesley College in Winnipeg with the goal of high school matriculation grades 9 12 Following his father s death in 1906 he returned to school to complete his course of studies 1 18 nbsp Dr R G Ferguson 1916 Senior Stick University of Manitoba At first Ferguson planned a career in the Church He carried out mission field work in Alberta in 1908 and 1912 He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1910 with a Bronze Medal in Arts and was selected Senior Stick by classmates However his voice was not considered strong enough to support preaching and in 1912 he enrolled in the Manitoba College of Medicine 1 19 20 In 1915 while still a student he briefly took over the administration of the Manitoba Tuberculosis Sanatorium in Ninette Manitoba for David Alexander Stewart 1 29 In his final year of medical school Ferguson worked part time in the laboratory of S J S Pierce making typhoid vaccine for the Canadian Expeditionary Force CEF 1 21 In 1916 Ferguson graduated second in his class in medicine earning another Bronze Medal 1 19 20 Ferguson s post graduate work included training at the London Hospital in England and at Harvard School of Medicine Harvard University 10 needs independent confirmation His two youngest brothers Vernon and Frank had by then enrolled at the same University and subsequently left school to join the CEF Vernon joined in 1915 and was wounded at Ypres as a member of the Princess Patricia s Canadian Highland Light Infantry He received the Mons Star contracted tuberculosis and died in 1930 citation needed His youngest brother Frank was discharged from the CEF and joined No 87 Squadron RAF Frank flew a Sopwith Dolphin and was shot down by Bavarian Ace Michael Hutterer near the German Canadian lines Marcoyne on the evening of September 3 1918 Hutterer was a member of Jagdstaffel 23 Second Lt Frank Ferguson is buried at Arras Road Cemetery near Roclincourt France 11 nbsp RG Ferguson and wife Helen with Margaret Robert Sheelagh David Patricia and Helen Honey outside the family cottage at Echo Lake in the Qu Appelle Valley July 1940 Ferguson married Helen Ross of Wynyard Saskatchewan on July 5 1916 after a four year engagement 1 21 22 They had seven children Robert Ross Helen Hart Margaret Love later Fallis Patricia Motherwell later Dyck Sheelagh Barrable John Vincent and David John Vincent Jackie twin of Sheelagh died in infancy on December 9 1925 1 149 150 12 In 1929 RG Ferguson wrote The Wood Fairies Christmas Deed for his 6 surviving children In 2014 this story was published made available via Amazon with proceeds donated to the Lung Association of Saskatchewan A short animated feature of the story was filmed and uploaded to YouTube 13 Ferguson s wife Helen was also an accomplished artist which is detailed in her biography Her Legacy The Life and Art of Helen FJ Ross Ferguson Amazon RG Ferguson s children Robert Ross Ferguson Sheelagh and David served in the Royal Canadian Air Force during the second world war 11 His son in law Major John Vernon Jack Love of Yorkton Saskatchewan was killed leading D company of the Regina Rifles Regiment onto Juno Beach at Normandy France June 6 1944 D Day Jack Love is buried in Beny sur Mer Canadian War Cemetery 14 His granddaughter Sheelagh Cooper nee Barrable an entrepreneur and social activist also received the Order of the British Empire OBE in King Charles III first New years Honours list in 2023 https tnnbda com his majesty the kings new years honours list 2023 Medical career edit Following graduation Ferguson worked under A B Alexander in the Acute Infection Hospital and others in Winnipeg as Assistant Medical Superintendent replacing Alvin Trotter Mathers In June 1917 he was hired by Maurice Macdonald Seymour 3 to become the acting medical superintendent of the new Fort Qu Appelle Sanatorium which was opened on October 10 1917 1 22 Conditions during the war had fostered both the spread of tuberculosis among soldiers and its detection In response the federal government provided new funding towards the completion of the sanatorium and the treatment of returning soldiers 15 Ferguson initially expected to be replaced within a few months by Lieutenant Colonel William Malloch Hart who had done much of the initial organization of the sanatorium before enlisting in the Canadian Army Medical Corps Hart however submitted an official letter of resignation in November 1919 opening the way for Ferguson to become the permanent medical superintendent 1 47 48 16 Ferguson remained at Fort San for 31 years He was a skilled administrator with a knowledge of economics and the ability to analyze the dire challenge presented by rampant tuberculosis infection in the community 1 43 44 In 1917 the Province of Saskatchewan had the nation s highest incidence of tuberculosis with an annual death rate of 400 cases for a population of 700 000 people 57 deaths per 100 000 people Another 1000 people per year were estimated to break down with the disease and far more were infected and became contagious often before realizing that they were ill 1 42 Native populations were and continue to be particularly affected 17 as was documented by Peter Bryce as early as the 1900s 18 and again by Ferguson himself 19 Ferguson saw quickly that the only way to break the recurrent cycle of exposure illness and death was to provide diagnosis treatment and hospitalization at no cost to the patient This was a huge political challenge Ferguson persisted in his efforts working patiently to gain support from people with tuberculosis the public members of the medical profession and last but not least politicians throughout his career 1 Ferguson recognized that education was an essential step he saw the need to develop broad public understanding of tuberculosis disease transmission and support for measures to reduce it 20 As one of three members appointed by the Provincial Government to form the Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis Commission in 1921 he wrote the entire report 21 Nineteen of the report s 22 recommendations were implemented Chief among them was making the cost of diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis a public responsibility Upon Ferguson s death in 1964 then Saskatchewan Minister of Health Minister Allan Blakeney said The introduction of diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis at public expense was one of the early and essential steps in developing a program of health services for all 2 22 Ferguson painstakingly reviewed the available records relating to illness among First Nations peoples in the Fort Qu Appelle and File Hill areas and identified a series of epidemics related to increasing contact with the incoming white population These included pertussis 1887 measles 1890 1898 and influenza 1890 1918 1919 in addition to tuberculosis 1 90 91 He actively investigated changes in resistance and related factors as possible explanations for the lack of resistance to disease displayed by First Nations populations The patterns he saw in his data suggested that resettlement in houses and on reserves was followed by an epidemic rise in tuberculosis cases affecting the entire native population Deaths peaked in 1886 with 9 000 deaths per 100 000 people and then dropped to 3 000 1895 2 000 1901 and 1 000 1907 deaths per 100 000 people This suggested the arrival of a disease in a susceptible population followed by decreasing rates as more resistant individuals survived 1 90 92 23 Ferguson did not hesitate to relate such illness in First Nations people to the widespread physical economic and social changes that were impacting them 1 94 95 In October 1928 Ferguson gave a landmark presentation entitled Tuberculosis Among the Indians of the Great Canadian Plains at the 14th Annual Conference of the National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis at British Medical House London 24 It established him as an international authority on tuberculosis Later on the same trip he attended the Council of the International Union Against TB where the double barred cross of Lorena was adopted as a symbol of the worldwide fight against tuberculosis 25 A further achievement in 1928 was integration of the native population into the sanatorium Saskatchewan under Ferguson s guidance was the first province by eight years to fully integrate the native population into sanatoria Previously they were segregated Ferguson found an ally in incoming Premier James G Gardiner and on 1 January 1929 the Saskatchewan Sanatoria amp Hospitals Act was passed Saskatchewan became the first province in Canada to make tuberculosis treatment free to all who needed it 1 82 As of 1930 Ferguson became director of medical services and general superintendent for all three of the Saskatchewan sanatoria Fort Qu Appelle opened in 1917 Saskatoon 1925 Prince Albert 1930 T W Hamilton took over the post of medical superintendent at Fort San from 1930 1946 26 BCG Research edit At the time Ferguson began his career at Fort Qu Appelle BCG vaccination was controversial The idea of introducing live tubercle into the human body was considered dubious from perspectives of both health and morality This grew to a fever pitch in 1930 when 249 infants in Lubeck Germany were vaccinated with a vaccine which was supposedly BCG but which turned out to be contaminated with virulent tubercle bacillus Seventy one infants died of tuberculosis as a result Ferguson initially expressed concern over the proposal to test the BCG vaccine writing in a private letter to the President of the National Research Council on 3 January 1931 19 27 I feel it would be unwise to initiate human experimental work among Indian children who are direct wards of the Government and for which reason they are not in a position to exercise voluntary cooperation Furthermore in case of difficulties arising the Government itself could not be without responsibility 19 Nonetheless the reality in 1926 was that Indigenous people were ten times more likely than non indigenous to die from tuberculosis Ferguson s testing of indigenous students at File Hills and Qu Appelle showed that 92 of the students tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis compared to 54 of students in the non indigenous population Ferguson achieved substantial decreases in tuberculosis related deaths through the work of visiting nurses the isolation and hospitalization of active tuberculosis cases and measures to improve living conditions housing water and diet Vaccination offered the hope of improving the odds even more for the most at risk patients infants 3 By 1932 Ferguson felt that a test of BCG vaccine was justified He was so convinced of the value of BCG vaccination that to prove its safety he vaccinated his own children before vaccinating anyone else 28 In 1932 Ferguson received approval to begin BCG vaccination of newborn infants in the Fort Qu Appelle Health Unit and an increase in his annual National Research Council NRC grant for BCG research which remarkably was renewed for 21 consecutive years Ferguson collaborated on this work with Austin Simes a former classmate 28 who became medical superintendent of the Qu Appelle Indian Health Unit in 1929 29 Over a 12 year period Ferguson and Simes vaccinated over 600 First Nation newborns in a semi randomized manner with followup throughout the period of the study Families were paired in terms of socio economic factors such as housing and sanitation to ensure that the vaccinated and unvaccinated groups were as comparable as possible 30 31 Although their assignment of infants to trials might not meet a modern standard of randomization the Panel on Tuberculosis of the NRC Associate Committee on Medical Research in 1949 recognized Ferguson s and Simes s study as the most scientific trial of BCG yet made 28 31 BCG vaccination was found to be highly protective 32 with a vaccine efficacy of 67 Ferguson and Simes work continues to be cited as a well designed and rigorous study of the effectiveness of BCG vaccine against pulmonary and pleural TB 30 33 Ferguson also took steps to document and address the issue of illness among nurses Nurses working with tuberculor patients were at extremely high risk for contracting the disease By using BCG vaccine to vaccinate student nurses he was able to reduce the incidence of tuberculosis among student nurses from 5 to less than 1 15 34 Ferguson s elegant studies 35 suggested that immunity took time to fully mature as much as 18 months after an initial exposure During that time each successive exposure contributed to the cumulative risk for infection one reason why it was so important to segregate active cases from those who were not yet ill 35 36 Socio economic conditions edit With their National Research Council funding Ferguson and Simes were able to carry out a long term study of families of equal status with respect to living social and economic conditions likely to impact health outcomes This enabled them to examine both the impact of BCG vaccination and the role of socio economic factors 28 31 Ferguson s work in the 1930s and 1940s demonstrated for the first time that due to the number of deaths among vaccinated infants which were not related to tuberculosis poverty not tuberculosis was the greatest threat to Native infants 37 Further based on his research Ferguson recognized that The obvious conditions facilitating the progress of the epidemic and the spread of infection at this time were the concentration of the Indians in fixed residences on the reserves lack of sanitation their contact with the surrounding white settlers and the concentration of the children in boarding schools for education Under these conditions tuberculosis infection spread quickly 38 Ferguson considered Indian Residential schools to be a battleground in the fight against tuberculosis From 1933 37 he sent out the travelling clinic of the Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis League to residential schools throughout Saskatchewan to examine Native children documenting conditions in the schools Ferguson also advocated for the conversion of selected Residential schools into tuberculosis sanitoria so that the sick children could be separated from the healthy to decrease the extremely high infection rates in the schools In 1937 the Ministry of Indian Affairs introduced drastic funding cuts to medical care explicitly targeting both tuberculosis funding and the provision of hospital care and drug treatments to Native people Ferguson sent an angry letter to the Minister Harold Wigmore McGill protesting the cuts and warning the Government that some of the worst conditions were to be found in Duck Lake Saskatchewan in Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King s own riding of Prince Albert 19 Funding was restored and increased in subsequent years but the request to convert a residential school into a tuberculosis hospital was ignored leaving students with active tuberculosis in residential schools as wards of the government 3 Photoradiography edit Beginning in the 1920s Ferguson worked with photographer Robert S Connell and his brother James The brothers developed methods to photograph radiographic images and travelled to communities and schools with a portable generator and x ray machine to screen people for tuberculosis This included flying to remote areas such as Lac la Ronge and Beauval By the 1940s radiography was being used as a standard technique for detecting both tubercular and cancer cases when new patients entered hospital 29 Mass x ray surveys were carried out at the community level in Melville in 1941 and provincewide by August 1947 26 Ferguson retired in September 1948 at age 65 and was succeeded by John Orr as director of medical services for all three sanatoria 26 Ferguson spent the next few years writing Studies in Tuberculosis 1955 36 The 1940s and 1950s brought the discovery of newly developed antibiotics 39 The combination of the tactics of detection isolation and treatment that Ferguson had advocated with powerful new drugs began to empty the sanatoria 19 The Prince Albert San ceased to treat tuberculosis patients in 1961 Fort San in 1972 and the Saskatoon San in 1978 26 Legacy edit Statistics alone provide evidence of R G Ferguson s lasting impact on the fight against tuberculosis In 1917 the Province of Saskatchewan recorded a rate of incidence of 50 per 100 000 of population The death rate for Saskatchewan s First Nations infants in their first year was even more appalling in 1936 it was still 1 603 per 100 000 By 1948 the year Ferguson retired the death rate was down to 17 per 100 000 These impressive numbers are the result of Ferguson s two pronged attack First he established access to free diagnosis and treatment and second he established BCG as a safe and effective vaccination 28 Statistics alone however do not measure Ferguson s full influence on public health policy He charted a course that would not only guide the direction of treatment of tuberculosis but that would inspire health coverage plans across the country for generations In 1935 one of his contemporaries Norman Bethune who himself had contracted tuberculosis attempted unsuccessfully to organize a Montreal Group and extend this concept and introduce a free health care system across Canada 6 nbsp Dr R G Ferguson Sept 1948 Dr JM Uhrich Dr RG Ferguson Premier TC Douglas Dr F Munroe All Ministers of Health during Dr Ferguson s career On his retirement in 1948 the person voted through the English language branch of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to be the Greatest Canadian T C Tommy Douglas who had been both Premier and Minister of Public Health from 1944 48 said of Ferguson Not before in the history of this province has there been such a universal expression of regard for one man Few men have the opportunity in their lifetime to give such service as Dr Ferguson has to his generation and to his age Still fewer would be so successful in rising to the opportunity 40 Paradoxically Ferguson s legacy was articulated as early as 1917 in his speech on the opening of the Fort Qu Appelle Sanitorium When we think of the future of this institution we do not think of its building and equipment but rather of an idea a force a group of associations and a locality with its hopeful traditions glowing with prestige and confidence in the cure of the disease We would like to think of it as a medical centre where is available every facility for the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis where a sick man may get every chance to regain his broken health and return to a sphere of usefulness as a citizen We want it to be an educational centre where the facts about a disease are being accumulated for public use a centre where sufferers may come to get an education in regard to a disease may learn its cure and prevention Last of all we want it to have the atmosphere of a home where those who have fallen ill with the disease may come to rest and receive the encouragement and direction necessary to win a hard fight 41 It is testimony to his vision and tenacity that he achieved exactly what he set out to achieve Organizations editPresident Saskatchewan Medical Association 1922 15 President Canadian Tuberculosis Association now the Canadian Lung Association 1935 1936 42 Fellow American College of Chest Physicians 15 American Trudeau Society 1945 1957 President Saskatchewan Hospital Association Member World Health Organization Expert Committee on Tuberculin and BCG 1948 43 Member World Health Organization Expert Committee on Tuberculosis 1949 44 Awards and honours editIn recognition of his achievements in the fight against tuberculosis Ferguson received many awards and honours including The Order of the British Empire Civil 1935 as George Ferguson For services in connection with the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis in the Dominion of Canada 42 45 46 The King s Medallion Silver Jubilee of King George V 1935 42 The Charles Mickle Fellowship 1961 awarded by the University of Toronto to the person judged by the University to have done the most to advance medical art or medicine over the previous 10 years 10 Honorary Doctor of Laws University of Saskatchewan 1946 47 Honorary Life Memberships in the Brazilian Tuberculosis Association 48 Canadian Medical Association 1953 48 Canadian Public Health Association 48 Canadian Tuberculosis Association 1952 49 Royal Canadian Legion 1947 15 Saskatchewan branch of the Canadian Public Health Association 1959 Saskatchewan Medical Association 1948 nbsp Dr R G Ferguson May 1935 Muskeke O Kemacan Ketche na na ta we wayo Great White Medicine Man In 1935 Ferguson was named honorary chief of the three bands of the Qu Appelle Valley Muscowpetung Piapot and Pasqua and given the Cree name Muskeke O Kemacan Ketche na na ta we wayo or Great White Physician 50 15 nbsp Dr Ferguson and Dr Boughton with a group of ex service patients waiting for the arrival of their Majesties King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in June 1939 On June 3 1939 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited the Sanatorium at Saskatoon where they were met by Ferguson and Veterans of the First World War who had also survived tuberculosis 22 In 1944 the Governor General of Canada Alexander Cambridge 1st Earl of Athlone and his wife Princess Alice Countess of Athlone were dinner guests of the Fergusons while visiting the San at Fort Qu Appelle 51 Further recognition of Ferguson s achievements came in the form of the establishment of the Dr R G Ferguson Professorship 1973 at the University of Saskatchewan 52 the Dr George Ferguson School Prek to Grade 8 in Regina Saskatchewan 53 1969 and Ferguson Island Saskatchewan 15 Bibliography editFerguson RG 1955 Studies in Tuberculosis Toronto University of Toronto Press 54 Ferguson RG Simes AB January 1949 BCG vaccination of Indian infants in Saskatchewan Tubercle 30 1 5 11 doi 10 1016 s0041 3879 49 80055 9 PMID 18102809 Ferguson RG Simes AB 31 December 1941 Vaccination of Indian children with BCG in Saskatchewan Report to the Committee on Tuberculosis of the National Research Council unpublished Ferguson RG 1928 Tuberculosis among the Indians of the Great Canadian plains London Adlard and Son Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis Commission 1922 Report of the Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis Commission PDF Regina Sask J W Reid King s Printer OCLC 879286773 Ferguson RG 2014 The Wood Fairies Christmas Deed Heyden amp Son Incorporated ISBN 978 0994001108 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Houston C Stuart Clarence Stuart 1991 R G Ferguson Crusader against Tuberculosis Toronto and Oxford Hannah Institute and Dundurn Press a b Houston C Stuart 2002 Steps on the Road to Medicare Why Saskatchewan Led the Way Montreal and Kingston McGill Queen s University Press p 55 ISBN 9780773525504 a b c d e f Niessen Shuana 2017 Shattering the Silence The Hidden History of Indian Residential Schools in Saskatchewan PDF Regina Saskatchewan Faculty of Education University of Regina ISBN 9780773107502 Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis League Lung Saskatchewan Retrieved 26 July 2022 a b Houston C Stuart December 9 2013 Robert George Ferguson The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 26 July 2022 a b Canadian Medical Association Journal April 18 1964 Vol 90 Grzybowski S Allen EA 6 April 1999 Tuberculosis 2 History of the disease in Canada Canadian Medical Association Journal 160 7 1025 8 PMC 1230197 PMID 10207344 Seagle Joseph B 1 March 1955 A review of BCG and other antituberculosis vaccines The Journal of Pediatrics 46 3 337 347 doi 10 1016 S0022 3476 55 80294 6 ISSN 0022 3476 PMID 14354594 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Ferguson Robert George 1883 1964 The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Retrieved 21 October 2022 a b Canadian Journal of Public Health Canadian Public Health Association Milestones in Public Health 52 1961 Retrieved 29 December 2022 a b Frank Willard Ferguson The Canadian Virtual War Memorial Veterans Affairs Canada Veterans Affairs Canada 20 February 2019 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Remembering the life of Robert Ferguson Regina Leader Post September 22 2006 Retrieved 30 December 2022 Dr George Ferguson Book Launch Nov 14 2014 Lung Saskatchewan Retrieved 30 December 2022 Canada Veterans Affairs 20 February 2019 John Vernon Love The Canadian Virtual War Memorial Veterans Affairs Canada Retrieved 30 December 2022 a b c d e f g Houston C Stuart Massie Merle 1 October 2013 36 Steps on the Road to Medicare How Saskatchewan Led the Way Montreal Quebec McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 8958 2 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Parfitt Charles D 1923 Lieutenant Colonel William Malloch Hart Trans Am Climatol Clin Assoc 39 xxii xxv PMC 2262431 Hick Sarah June 2019 The Enduring Plague How Tuberculosis in Canadian Indigenous Communities is Emblematic of a Greater Failure in Healthcare Equality Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health 9 2 89 92 doi 10 2991 jegh k 190314 002 PMC 7310753 PMID 31241864 Sproule Jones Megan October 1996 Crusading for the Forgotten Dr Peter Bryce Public Health and Prairie Native Residential Schools Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 13 2 199 224 doi 10 3138 cbmh 13 2 199 ISSN 0823 2105 PMID 11620073 a b c d e Lux Maureen October 1998 Perfect Subjects Race Tuberculosis and the Qu Appelle BCG Vaccine Trial Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 15 2 277 295 doi 10 3138 cbmh 15 2 277 ISSN 0823 2105 PMID 11624067 FERGUSON R G 1935 Activities in a Province Wide Programme for the Control of Tuberculosis Canadian Public Health Journal 26 3 130 137 ISSN 0319 2652 JSTOR 41977200 Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis Commission 1922 Report of the Saskatchewan Anti Tuberculosis Commission Regina J W Reid King s Printer pp 94 some folded OCLC 879286773 a b Tribute issue to Dr Robert George Ferguson The Valley Echo Vol XLV no 3 1964 Ackley Sarah F Liu Fengchen Porco Travis C Pepperell Caitlin S 24 September 2015 Modeling historical tuberculosis epidemics among Canadian First Nations effects of malnutrition and genetic variation PeerJ 3 e1237 doi 10 7717 peerj 1237 PMC 4586807 PMID 26421237 Ferguson R G 1928 Tuberculosis among the Indians of the Great Canadian Plains Trans Fourteenth Annual Conference of the National Assoc for the Prevention of Tuberculosis at the Great Hall British Medical House October 15th and 16th 1928 Fourteenth Annual Conference London England p 51 The Cross of Lorena PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 10 03 Retrieved 2011 02 17 a b c d Tuberculosis Control The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Retrieved 31 December 2022 Luca S Mihaescu T March 2013 History of BCG Vaccine Maedica 8 1 53 8 PMC 3749764 PMID 24023600 a b c d e Houston CS February 1993 Ferguson s BCG research Canada s first randomized clinical trial Clinical and Investigative Medicine 16 1 89 91 PMID 8467583 a b Peel 7438 Broderick Jeanette Scenes of home and abroad Xmas 1938 1938 peel library ualberta ca Retrieved 31 December 2022 a b de Gijsel David von Reyn C Fordham 1 March 2019 A Breath of Fresh Air BCG Prevents Adult Pulmonary Tuberculosis International Journal of Infectious Diseases 80 S6 S8 doi 10 1016 j ijid 2019 02 036 ISSN 1201 9712 PMID 30822546 S2CID 73492753 a b c Ferguson RG Simes AB 1 January 1949 BCG vaccination of Indian infants in Saskatchewan A study carried out with financial assistance from the National Research Council of Canada Tubercle 30 1 5 11 doi 10 1016 S0041 3879 49 80055 9 ISSN 0041 3879 PMID 18102809 Retrieved 30 December 2022 Waldram James Burgess Herring Ann Young T Kue 1 January 2006 Aboriginal Health in Canada Historical Cultural and Epidemiological Perspectives University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8579 5 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Mangtani Punam Abubakar Ibrahim Ariti Cono Beynon Rebecca Pimpin Laura Fine Paul E M Rodrigues Laura C Smith Peter G Lipman Marc Whiting Penny F Sterne Jonathan A 15 February 2014 Protection by BCG Vaccine Against Tuberculosis A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials Clinical Infectious Diseases 58 4 470 480 doi 10 1093 cid cit790 PMID 24336911 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Preas Sally 1947 BCG Vaccination against Tuberculosis PDF The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 25 2 215 222 doi 10 2307 3348183 JSTOR 3348183 Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b Long Richard Divangahi Maziar Schwartzman Kevin 24 March 2022 Chapter 2 Transmission and pathogenesis of tuberculosis Canadian Journal of Respiratory Critical Care and Sleep Medicine 6 sup1 22 32 doi 10 1080 24745332 2022 2035540 ISSN 2474 5332 S2CID 247716360 a b Long R Lau A 1 October 2016 How R G Ferguson s groundbreaking studies influenced our understanding of tuberculosis reinfection Where to next The International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease 20 10 1285 1287 doi 10 5588 ijtld 16 0447 PMID 27725035 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Jones Esyllt MacDougall Heather Monnais Laurence Hanley James Carstairs Catherine 29 April 2021 Beyond the COVID 19 crisis building on lost opportunities in the history of public health FACETS 6 614 639 doi 10 1139 facets 2021 0002 S2CID 235551443 Ferguson R G 1955 Studies in Tuberculosis Toronto University of Toronto Press p 6 Iseman M D 1 July 2002 Tuberculosis therapy past present and future European Respiratory Journal 20 36 suppl 87S 94s doi 10 1183 09031936 02 00309102 ISSN 0903 1936 PMID 12168751 S2CID 16498788 Retrieved 1 January 2023 The Valley Echo Vol XXIX No 9 Pg 5 September 1948 Valley Echo volume 45 3 page 3 quoted by the Canadian Lung Association a b c Our New President Bulletin of the Canadian Tuberculosis Association 13 4 Canadian Tuberculosis Association 1 1935 OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION No 15 REPORTS OF EXPERT COMMITTEES TO THE EXECUTIVE BOARD PDF Geneva WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION April 1949 pp 9 10 OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION No 24 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR GENERAL TO THE WORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLY AND TO THE UNITED NATIONS 1949 PDF Geneva WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION 1950 p 86 Acts of the Parliament of Canada 17th Parliament 6th Session Chapter 1 66 1935 Ottawa Brown Chamberlin Law Printer to the Queen s Most Excellent Majesty 1935 p xiii Retrieved 31 December 2022 MBE Civil Awarded to Canadians 1934 1935 PDF www blatherwick net Honorary Degrees University of Saskatchewan Retrieved 31 December 2022 a b c Roth F B Martin G K Brown W G 1961 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE ASSOCIATION 1960 61 PART III Canadian Journal of Public Health 52 8 343 351 ISSN 0008 4263 JSTOR 41983337 Dr Ferguson s Canadian Tuberculosis Association membership Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan Retrieved 1 January 2023 Scroll naming Dr Ferguson an Indian Chief Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan Retrieved 31 December 2022 Press Clippings PDF 1944 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Cockcroft DW July 2015 Respiratory medicine in Saskatchewan An historical perspective Canadian Respiratory Journal 22 4 197 8 doi 10 1155 2015 932857 PMC 4530849 PMID 26252531 McNinch James 2022 PARENT TEACHER HOME VISITS INITIATIVE Final Report PDF Saskatchewan School Board Retrieved 31 December 2022 Long R November 2015 Making a timely diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis Canadian Respiratory Journal 22 6 317 21 doi 10 1155 2015 826035 PMC 4676393 PMID 26469154 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title R G Ferguson amp oldid 1181145447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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