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Helen
Mayo 1878 - 1967 paediatrician
Helen
Mary Mayo (1878-1967), doctor, was born on 1 October 1878 at West
Terrace, Adelaide, eldest of seven children of Henrietta Mary (born
Donaldson) and George Gibbes Mayo. Her childhood was spent in a
happy family atmosphere in which both parents played a large part
in their children's development, boys and girls alike enjoying impromptu
natural science lessons from their father on bush rambles. Educated
by her parents to the age of ten, Helen then received morning lessons
from a governess. Her formal schooling was brief - short periods
at private schools and a year at the Advanced School for Girls.
Helen always wanted to be a doctor but being considered too young
for medicine, enrolled in Arts at the University of Adelaide. After
two years she transferred to medicine and topped her final year,
winning the Everard Scholarship. In 1904-05 she gained experience
in midwifery and children's diseases, working at Great Ormond Hospital,
London, Coombe Hospital, Dublin and St Stephen's Hospital for Women
and Children, Delhi. There she noticed a higher incidence of caesarean
births among women in purdah than among poorer women who were not
in purdah. The cause was rickets, though the link between vitamin
D deficiency and rickets was not then known. In her letters she
commented wryly she was admired in India where fat was a valued
quality. Behind the competent professional persona was a very human
woman who joked about her weight and regretted her 'unruly' hair.
Back in Adelaide, Dr Mayo set up a practice and was appointed honorary
anaesthetist at the Children's Hospital and clinical bacteriologist
at the Adelaide Hospital, her laboratory work there being the basis
of her MD in 1926. Infant health was her major interest. In 1909
with her friend Harriet Stirling, she established a School for Mothers
(the origin of the Mothers and Babies' Health Association, 1927),
and Mareeba Hospital for babies. In the ethos of scientific rationality
which then prevailed, woman's 'natural' or 'innate' mothering qualities
were in question. Mayo believed women needed assistance in rearing
healthy children, especially in an urban environment. She fought
opposition to the hospitalising of sick babies, and made a systematic
study of infant feeding and the problems of cross-infection. Later,
with government assistance and much voluntary work, the Mothers
and Babies' Health Association provided baby clinics which advised
and reassured generations of young mothers.
At the Children's Hospital she was honorary assistant physician
for out-patients from 1919 and 'indoor' honorary physician from
1926; she also had considerable responsibilities as an honorary
physician at the Adelaide Hospital and the babies' hospital and
a busy private practice. From 1926-34 she was a clinical lecturer
in medical diseases of children at the University of Adelaide. In
1933 Mayo became a foundation member of the Australian College of
Physicians. She wrote later that Dr E. Britten-Jones had said to
her 'Now that you have given up midwifery, you are qualified to
become a Fellow'. In 1935 she was awarded an OBE.
In private life and in public Mayo was supported by women friends
and colleagues. In 1909 she was one of the founders of the Women
Graduates' Club of the University of Adelaide and she also helped
found a Lyceum Club, with the objective of advancing the status
of women in professional life and in art and letters. She attributed
the completion of her MD at a busy time to the support and encouragement
received from her long term partner, Dr Constance Finlayson.
She maintained strong links with the University of Adelaide, serving
on its Council from 1914-60, the first woman in Australia to be
elected to the governing body of a university. She worked for the
establishment of a residential college for women, St Ann's, and
served as chairman of its council for many years. She was a member
for over twenty years of various advisory committees on health matters
to South Australian governments.
Her long career spanned a period in which infant mortality continued
to decline and women became prominent members of the medical profession.
She worked indefatigably and with humour in a public sphere very
newly opened to women.
Alison Mackinnon
Alison Mackinnon The New Women: Early Women Graduates of Adelaide
University 1987.
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