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Vera
Scantlebury Brown (1889-1946), doctor, was born on 7 August 1889
to Dr G. J. Scantlebury and his independent-minded wife, Catherine
(born Baynes). A strong supporter of education for girls, Mrs Scantlebury
sent Vera to Toorak College, a small private school, where she did
well in science. With her mother's encouragement, she then studied
medicine at the University of Melbourne, graduating in 1913 and
doing her residency at Children's Hospital, Melbourne.
In 1919 Vera went to London and undertook wartime medical duties
at the Endell St military hospital. She worked with Dr Elizabeth
Garrett Anderson and met other suffragists but did not particularly
identify with their cause. She had no clear ideas about her future
career when she returned to Melbourne in 1919. Although hoping to
go into private practice, she accepted several short term appointments,
including appointments to the Women's and the Children's Hospitals.
Feeling somewhat gloomy about her prospects in competition with
male doctors returned from the war, she accepted the position of
medical officer to the recently formed Victorian Baby Health Centres
Association. She thus became involved in a lively and expanding
movement and was soon lecturing to trainee mothercraft and infant
welfare nurses. She also practised privately and was medical officer
to the Free Kindergarten Union of Victoria and Melbourne Church
of England Girls' Grammar School.
Her interest in and commitment to the cause of infant and maternal
health escalated on a study tour to New Zealand, Canada and the
United States in 1924. After her return, the Victorian government
asked her, along with Henrietta Main, an English doctor, to prepare
a report comparing infant welfare in Victoria with that in New Zealand,
where there was a system of state supported clinics. The 1926 report
provided the foundation for increased involvement by the state in
maternal and child welfare. It recommended establishing a position
of Director of Infant Welfare and argued that, although mortality
rates had declined, many improvements could be made with better
trained staff and a well- supervised system of clinics.
Dr Vera, as she became widely known, had successfully completed
the degree of doctor of medicine, specialising in children's diseases,
in 1924. She accepted the new position of Director of Infant Welfare,
but was only appointed half-time as she had recently married (in
September 1926) Edward Brown, Associate Professor of Engineering
at the University of Melbourne. During the next few years Dr Vera
worked strenuously to bring together rival factions in the infant
welfare movement and to standardise training and procedures in the
clinics. In particular, she went to great lengths to prepare a manual
on artificial feeding, spending hours testing formulas and measuring
implements. This was part of a major effort to make infant feeding
- and child care in general - more 'scientific'.
In 1928 Dr Vera became a mother herself when her son Edward was
born. Her daughter Catherine was born in 1931. Vera combined her
busy professional life with her role as wife and mother in her own
way - often somewhat haphazardly. However, even with the support
of domestic staff, family and friends, she often felt exhausted
by her dual role. Her interests broadened as maternal welfare and
later preschools were added to her Department and she assisted in
the development and launching of 'Kindergarten of the Air' in 1944.
In 1938 she was awarded an OBE for her work. Although often in poor
health, she continued to work hard until her final illness and death
on 14 July 1945. She was one of the most significant figures in
the infant and maternal health movement in Australia in the inter-war
years. The organisation of a well developed system of infant welfare
clinics throughout Victoria reflected her skills and enthusiasm,
and her warmth and care for her staff and for others were as widely
acclaimed as her achievements in preventive health care for children.
Kerreen Reiger Double Time edited Marilyn Lake and Farley
Kelly 1985 ch 31.
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