User:Charles Philip Templer/sandbox

Paton-Philip, Philip (1922 - 2009) Date of Birth: 12 September 1922 Place of Birth: Cambridge, UK Date of Death: 2 March 2009 Occupation: Consultant Urologist Titles/Qualifications: MRCS 1946 FRCS 1955 BA Cambridge 1942 MB BChir 1945 MChir 1959 LRCP 1946

Philip Paton-Philip was a consultant urologist in Harley Street, Epsom and District Hospital and St Helier Hospital, Carshalton, also serving as a senior lecturer to St George's Hospital Medical School with honorary consultant status. He was born in Cambridge on 12 September 1922, the eldest son of Wilfrid Paton Philip, a pioneering chest physician, and Mary Simpson, a nursing sister, whose own father had been a journalist. Educated at Perse School, Cambridge, Philip Paton-Philip proceeded to St John's College, Cambridge, for his natural science studies. He then went to St Bartholomew's Medical School on a Kitchener scholarship. After house appointments, in 1947 he served in the chest unit at the Royal Naval Hospital, Chatham, as surgeon in charge with the rank of surgeon lieutenant commander. In his post-service appointments he worked as a resident surgical officer at the London Clinic, and it was here that he was greatly influenced by Rodney Maingot, Dickson Wright, Sir Harold Gillies and Sir Archibald McIndoe. Definitive surgical and specialist urological training came as a senior registrar and chief assistant at St Bartholomew's Hospital, where he worked with Rupert Corbett and Alec Badenoch, the latter influencing his future specialist career. He was a clinical assistant at St Peter's Hospital for the Stone, London. In 1964 he was appointed to his definitive appointment, as a consultant urologist at Epsom and District Hospital and St Helier Hospital, Carshalton. He published in the thoracic field, particularly on death from air embolism whilst serving in the Royal Navy, and later on feminising testicular tumours. He retired early from the NHS in 1985 but continued in private practice for several years. He was a member of the Hunterian Society, the Royal Society of Medicine, the British Association of Urological Surgeons and the British Academy of Expert Witnesses, having developed a reputation in the medico-legal side of urology, thoracic surgery and problems associated with deep-water diving. Outside medicine, Philip Paton-Philip was an accomplished horseman and competed regularly in amateur cross country and show jumping championships. He was a member of the Garrick and Savage clubs. Philip Paton-Philip married Julia Frances Vaux in 1959, by whom he had one son, Charles who became an international investment banker. After a divorce he married again and had two more sons, the elder, Richard, became a barrister, and James, a solicitor. He died in hospital on 2 March 2009 shortly followed tragically two months later by his second wife who died in a riding accident. He is survived by his three sons, Charles, Richard and James.