Theophilus Thompson | |
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portrait taken in 1855
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Born |
Islington, London, England |
20 September 1807
Died | 11 August 1860 Sutton, Surrey, England |
(aged 52)
Occupation | Physician |
Years active | 1830 - 1860 |
Known for | work on influenza, tuberculosis Fellow of Royal Society |
Theophilus Thompson, M.D., F.R.S. (1807–1860) was a prominent London physician of the Victorian era known for his writings on tuberculosis and influenza.
Thompson was born on 20 September 1807 at Islington, London to Nathaniel Thompson (1761-1825), a textile merchant and member of the , and Nathaniel's wife Margaret Maw (d. 1811). He grew up in a religious household, and his upbringing after the premature death of his mother was overseen by his older brother Thomas Thompson (1785-1865), a well-known philanthropist of religious causes. As such, he grew up with Thomas Thompson's daughter Jemima Luke (neé Thompson) (1813-1906), who was less than six years behind Theophilus in age, and who became a popular writer of children's hymns, religious studies, and other works. After studying medicine at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in Smithfield, London, Theophilus attended the University of Edinburgh, where in 1830 he received his M.D. degree. He also studied in Paris under the French physicians Gabriel Andral, and Guillaume Dupuytren, and attended lectures given by the zoologist Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire at the Jardin des Plantes.
He started a medical practice in London, but was soon appointed a physician to the St. Pancras Northern Dispensary in Middlesex, London, where he practiced for fourteen years. He also served as a lecturer at the Grosvenor Place School of Medicine in London, and was elected on 22 January 1846 as a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was then admitted in 1847 as a physician to the Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest, when it was located on Great Marlborough Street, before the facility relocated to become the Royal Brompton Hospital. In addition, he served as president in 1844 of the Medical Society of London, and also as president of Harveian Society of London, which today shares facilities with the Medical Society but was a separate group in Thompson's time. He is credited with introducing cod-liver oil into England, being the first to give bismuth to arrest diarrhea of phthisis (tuberculosis), and the first to prescribe oxide of zinc for night sweats. He was also one of the first British doctors to use the recently invented monaural stethoscope, having learned its use during his Paris studies.