Perhaps Dr. Christian Barnard’s blazing trail with his work
on open heart surgery during the late 60’s eclipsed the valuable contributions
of another, the Captain Thomas William Barnard, O.B.E., F.H.A., F.R.P.S.,
M.S.R. who refined X-Ray techniques some three decades earlier, during his
tenure at Madras. That he made a world standard institution of it at Madras
would not be known to many and so I thought it a good idea to share some of TWB’s
experiences and his charming insights with you all.
Prof Arcot Gajaraj wrote - Captain Barnard belonged to the category of great men who had a modest beginning, but by dint of hard work, perseverance and foresight brought laurels not only on themselves but also made valuable contributions to the welfare of mankind. He was not a product of any medical school and began his life as an ordinary X-ray operator hardly 10 years after the very discovery of X-rays. What is even more astounding, as our esteemed Madras Chronicler S. Muthiah explained, is the fact that Radiology came to Madras in 1900, when the General Hospital got an X-ray unit a mere five years after Wilhelm Roentgen’s discovery and before such facilities, it is claimed, were established in much of Europe and the rest of the world. As time went by and the first world war wrought tribulations on much of the western world, this invention was to bring about rapid developments in correct diagnosis of diseases, orthopedic issues and go on to impact medical sciences immensely. Let’s now trace the voyage of both man and equipment, their chance meeting at Bombay and see how it impacted the history of Indian medicine.
Prof Arcot Gajaraj wrote - Captain Barnard belonged to the category of great men who had a modest beginning, but by dint of hard work, perseverance and foresight brought laurels not only on themselves but also made valuable contributions to the welfare of mankind. He was not a product of any medical school and began his life as an ordinary X-ray operator hardly 10 years after the very discovery of X-rays. What is even more astounding, as our esteemed Madras Chronicler S. Muthiah explained, is the fact that Radiology came to Madras in 1900, when the General Hospital got an X-ray unit a mere five years after Wilhelm Roentgen’s discovery and before such facilities, it is claimed, were established in much of Europe and the rest of the world. As time went by and the first world war wrought tribulations on much of the western world, this invention was to bring about rapid developments in correct diagnosis of diseases, orthopedic issues and go on to impact medical sciences immensely. Let’s now trace the voyage of both man and equipment, their chance meeting at Bombay and see how it impacted the history of Indian medicine.
But before we get to Barnard and his X-ray work, we should
hasten to find out how the first X-ray unit reached Madras so early. It appears
to have been installed during the days when senior surgeon and Professor Lt Col
John Maitland served at the GH. We are given to understand that it was a
primitive unit, run from a small set of accumulators. The radiologist who
handled the equipment did not quite remain upto date with technology and was
not well regarded, so avenues for private investment were opened and Dr. P.
Rama Rao filled the void and set up his own X-Ray institute at Kilpauk. One
could conclude that Rama Rao and the unit at the GH, managed various patients
of the Madras presidency, with Rao sharing a larger percentage of the clientele.
As the anxiety of the Asst Surgeon General Dr Govindarajalu Naidu peaked with
this deplorable state of affairs, he started a search for a qualified and
experienced radiographer.
Captain Barnard’s entry into this dangerous field was
deliberate. Why dangerous, you who have been under an X-ray machine so many
times, would ask! In those days, the apparatus to produce these all seeing rays
was quite crude compared with that now used. It consisted of induction coils
with various types of interrupters and many gadgets and devices and well, the
naked X-Ray Tube had to be kept cool by various means. Earlier machines were
single phase self-rectified x-ray machines with air-cooled rectified valves, cones
and cylinders. The tables were mechanically or manually operated with crude
spot film devices, etc. There was but little protection against Radiation and
Electrical dangers and the risks "X-Ray Operators" (as the staff were
named in those days) were called upon to incur were many. Most of the early
operators lost limbs and developed dermatitis and other related injuries.
GH Madras |
T. W. Barnard joined the staff of the X-ray department of the London Hospital, Whitechapel in 1908. One aspect he picked up quite early was that even with poor equipment, one could obtain good results by dint of hard work. Quoting TWB from his memoirs “Although I used a 'naked' X-Ray Tubes with no protective shield, I escaped serious injury apart from damaged finger nails, as I took precautions ignored by my Seniors, the most important being to keep a safe distance from the X-Ray Tube when it was in action; I attribute the fact that I am alive today being due to my use of a length of insulated flex by means of which I switched the Tube mounted on my Ward apparatus "on and of' from a distance of about 10 feet”! Now you should also note that it was not a quick flash like you see today, but the patient was subjected to prolonged exposure for over 15 minutes to get a good image, so it was indeed a lot of radiation!
The equipment at Mudros |
A friendly electrician and the ‘mad sahib’ TWB decided to
install and commission this condemned system from Gallipoli, it use having been
served at the war front. As the story goes, when powered up, the top of the gas
tube promptly blew up due to moisture ingress. After scouring the Bombay bazaars
for repair material, the duo patched it all up and after finding a willing
patient, powered the system again only to see sparks flying all around the
bewildered and terrified patient, who promptly fled.
It was from these humble beginnings in Bombay that TWB
learnt so many important lessons such as cooling the film bed which usually
could not withstand the X-Ray heat or earthing the system (an invention wholly
his, but something he never bothered to patent) to drain leakage currents. After
moving to a hospital at Colaba and authoring a few papers, he found himself
appointed as ‘Radiologist to the Government of Madras’. Barnard was
enthusiastic because, as he stated - Madras has always had a good reputation
for its Medical facilities and its high standard of Medical Education (I must
add, my late father Dr Viswanatha Menon was a Stanley Medical College Alumni from
the 50’s and would have warmed up to this statement!). By then, there was
another X-Ray unit in Tanjore and a second private clinic in Madras. Would you
believe that the prime mover of the generator powering the Tanjore unit was run
by a bullock trotting around?
Anyway, Dr TWB quickly got the new department (not the
bullock) into a gallop and he was to remain there until 1941 as Chief Officer
of Radiology Services with supervision of all X-ray services covering an area
three times that of England and a population of 50 million. During that period
Captain Barnard opened some twenty new X-ray departments in the state and
developed the services in the Madras General Hospital and Medical College as a
major teaching center for South India. T. W.B. then established the Madras
Government Institute of Radiology, which to his surprise was named after him on
the day of the official opening in March 1934 as the Barnard Institute of
Radiology. The center had a primary GE
supplied Victor XP4 X-ray unit and a secondary screener unit and it became a
major center in South India with the initial cost of this section contributed
by Dewan Bahadur M. R. Subbiah Chettiar.
Barnard, who continued on as Director of the Institute till
1940, used the 400KV X-ray unit installed in 1934 for the first time in India
on his wife’s hand, just as Roentgen had done the first X-ray ever on his
wife’s hand!
H Miller explains in his obituary of Capt Barnard - There was nothing like it in India or in South East Asia, and not much like it in the USA or Great Britain at that time. It was a two storey building around a courtyard where playing fountains formed part of the air-conditioning plant of the X-ray diagnostic department. Its therapy unit housed a 400 kV apparatus, three 200 kV units, two superficial and two contact sets. It had a radium department including a radon plant for supplying radon for up-country hospitals. It had a physics department and laboratory, a physiotherapy department and a clinical photography unit. With its protected walls of locally made brick loaded with barium it had a layout so far in advance of its time that for a generation it remained the outstanding radiological center of South East Asia. The equipment has been kept up up-to-date by adding new units such as the Convergent Beam, Pendulum and another type of moving beam Therapy apparatus - long before important centers in England received such Units.
H Miller explains in his obituary of Capt Barnard - There was nothing like it in India or in South East Asia, and not much like it in the USA or Great Britain at that time. It was a two storey building around a courtyard where playing fountains formed part of the air-conditioning plant of the X-ray diagnostic department. Its therapy unit housed a 400 kV apparatus, three 200 kV units, two superficial and two contact sets. It had a radium department including a radon plant for supplying radon for up-country hospitals. It had a physics department and laboratory, a physiotherapy department and a clinical photography unit. With its protected walls of locally made brick loaded with barium it had a layout so far in advance of its time that for a generation it remained the outstanding radiological center of South East Asia. The equipment has been kept up up-to-date by adding new units such as the Convergent Beam, Pendulum and another type of moving beam Therapy apparatus - long before important centers in England received such Units.
Captain Barnard ‘Cappy’ remained with the Institute until he
left India in 1940 and under his guidance a number of courses for the Diploma of
Medical Radiology and for Certified Radiological Assistants were instituted
with Captain Barnard serving as the President of the Board of Examiners for
both diplomas. Though he had no basic medical qualifications, he was
instrumental in initiating several research programs, in collaboration with
medical colleagues, such as estimating the age with radio-graphic examination of
epiphysis and the study of endemic fluorosis poisoning.
Captain Barnard's had varied interests, he was associated
with the Madras Boy Scouts Association and was a keen collector of art objects.
But of course, his case files present the more interesting insight to his life
and times. As an invention which could see though body tissues, it found
instant acceptance with the London police who with Barnard’s help collared a
thief who had swallowed gold sovereigns, he later used the same method to catch
a Madras thief who had snatched a girl’s chain and swallowed it. Other
instances involved the seizing of stolen jewels secreted inside cheek cavities
of a woman member of a gang of robbers, a few involving gemology and
identification of gemstones, uncovering the sleazy tricks of some charlatans,
catching smugglers, determining the age of certain persons (process called
epiphysis), and so on.
Captain Barnard finally called it a day in 1940 and moved
back to England. Tracing his later days, H Miller continues - In November 1942
Captain Barnard took charge of a tiny office in the Sheffield Royal Infirmary
as Secretary of the Sheffield National Centre for Radiotherapy. From that time until
he retired in 1964 his influence on the development of radiotherapy services in
Sheffield was immense.
He worked with upcoming technologies such as megavoltage
therapy, isotope facilities and started a new radiotherapy hospital. In 1946
T.W.B. began negotiations with MIT about building a 2 MV Van de Graf generator
for Sheffield, the first commercial installation of such an equipment. Age
never mattered for when he started all this in Sheffield, he was 58!
He passed away in 1978, aged a ripe 93 years old.
Life has come a long way, nobody bats an eyelid thinking
about the radiographer o radiologist. But I am sure many are aware that global
radiology requirements these days are mostly outsourced to and handled from
India, something Barnard can be proud about. The concept has even got a new
name, tele-radiology, though it relates not to the X-ray work, but studying the
pictures and sending the diagnosis back taking advantage of time differences and
having a report ready by the start of the next working day.
But you may wonder how I stumbled into researching Capt
Barnard’s life in Madras. Well as it happened, some months ago, my good friend
Nick Balmer from the UK sent me a link from the British Library suggesting that
it could present an interesting challenge. The archives department was trying
to unearth the story behind a letter received by Capt Barnard in June 1923, a
letter sent by 4 girls from a small village near Trichur in Kerala, requesting monetary
help. I tried as hard as I could to find some information, but only succeeded in
figuring out that the girls belonged to St Mary’s school in Chenagloor. Did
Capt Barnard visit that area with a mobile Xray or something or did he just pass
by the Trichur area and the school? He must have visited Malabar just after he
got to India, so was it a pleasure trip, a vacation or on an X-Ray camp??I
could find no details at all, but the fact that he did many such camps. S
Muthiah put out a clarion call in his ‘postman knocked’, but I doubt if anybody
answered. If I do hear something, I will update this page.
The letter reads:
Jesus Mercy.
The good God rewardeth
even a cup of Cold Water given in His name to one of His little ones.
O.J. Annie, Mary, Catherine
and Elizabeth. Poor Students. Chemgaloor, Pudukad Post, Malabar
Most Honred Sir,
We, four poor student
girls (Mary and Catherine are orphans) most respectfully and humbly beg to
state that we are in great difficulties and distress. We are badly in need of
food and Clothes. We are promoted to our new class. We have not got new books. We
most humbly pray you will be kind enough to send us some help. We pray you will
not refuse our humble prayer. Thanking you in anticipation, we beg to remain
Yours most obedient
and humble servants.
O.J. Anne and others
22.6.1923
One thing is clear, Capt Barnard made an impression on those
little girls at Trichur as you can make out from the picture attached. OJ Annie,
Catherine, Mary and Elizabeth remain ghosts from the past. I don’t know if they
received the food, books and clothes they requested, but I believe they did
since Capt Barnard treasured this letter and stored it in his collection till
he died. The letter itself is remarkable and bordered with all the used stamps
the girls could find, of Cochin Raja’s, Travancore,
On that note, I will conclude, happy that I chose to spend some time researching yet another luminary, about whom you would otherwise never hear of…
References
Obituary - Captain T. W. Barnard, 0.8.E. 1885-1978 London -
Madras – Sheffield, H Miller - The British journal of radiology, Vol 51, # 611,
Nov 1978
Obituary – Capt TW
Barnard – Prof A Gajaraj, Indian journal of Radiology, vol 32, issue 4-5, 1978
X rays – Personal Recollections, Capt TW Barnard, Journal of
Medical Physics / Association of Medical Physicists of India. 1995, vol 20,
issue 3
Hindu Articles – The radiologist from Chipstead S Muthiah,
April 4, 2010
British library request - Karen Stapley, Curator, India
Office Records
Note: The title states Dr Barnard. He was not a doctor licensed with a medical degree, but was virtually considered one by dint of his meritorious service and the knowledge he possessed about his own field.
3 comments:
Interesting read. It is also worth noting that he was not a product of any medical school and began his life as an ordinary X-ray operator.
Sometimes self made people who learn by observation excel in their work.
Thanks Haddock
he was a committed man...
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