|
Phyllis
Cilento 1894 - 1987 doctor
Phyllis
Dorothy Cilento (1894-1987), medical practitioner, was born in Sydney
on 13 March 1894, only child of Alice Lane (born Walker) and Charles
Thomas McGlew, grain merchant. The family moved to Adelaide where
Phyllis was educated at the progressive Tormore House school and
the University of Adelaide. She entered as an Arts student and graduated
MB BS in 1918. She also studied art and joined the Student Christian
Movement. Phyllis always remained interested in religion, though
preferring broadly-based Christian philosophies to denominational
adherence. She did her residency at Adelaide Hospital before leaving
for postgraduate study in paediatrics with Sir Frederick Still at
Great Ormond St Hospital for Sick Children, London. Her lifelong
clinical interests in nutritional disorders and the care of pregnant
women and children dates from this period. She studied the use of
vitamin D and sunlight to treat rickets. Her determined investigation
of vitamin therapy in the face of conservative opposition was a
leitmotiv of her life.
Phyllis McGlew returned to Adelaide to marry fellow student Raphael
West Cilento on 18 March 1920. While serving in New Guinea he had
become interested in tropical medicine; they went to the Malay States,
where he was appointed medical officer in the British Colonial Service.
As Lady Medical Officer, Lower Perak, Phyllis became one of the
first women to hold a medical appointment in the British Colonial
Service. In Sydney in 1923 for the birth of her second child, she
studied new methods of family planning - another lifelong interest.
The Cilentos moved to Townsville in 1923, when Raphael became Director
of the Institute of Tropical Medicine. Phyllis had decided to remain
in practice but her time there was notable for her commonsense campaign,
the first of many, to persuade women to adopt loose-fitting clothing
in the tropics. Her third child was born in 1925.
Following an appointment for Raphael in New Guinea, Phyllis became
interested in the medical problems of children of malarial mothers.
She went to Brisbane on her husband's appointment as Commonwealth
Medical Officer and then as Queensland Director-General of Health
and was largely responsible for establishing the Queensland Mothercraft
Association. Its educational activities she regarded as her 'greatest
contribution to social welfare in Queensland'. Three more children
were born in Brisbane. Raphael was knighted in 1935.
In addition to private practice and an honorary appointment at the
Children's Hospital, Lady Cilento contributed articles on medical
subjects to newspapers. Her 'Medical Mother' column in the Daily
Mail and then in the Courier Mail ran for over 50 years
and established her as a remarkable communicator and educator. Her
Square Meals for the Family (1934) written during the depression
was a practical guide to inexpensive nutrition. She also published
Enjoy your Family (1964), Plan your Family (1965),
All about the Pill (1971), Drugs in Australia (1972)
and Vitamin E (1980). She was foundation president of the
Business and Professional Women's Club, Brisbane, in 1948.
Lady Cilento was an advocate of physiotherapy in preparation for
childbirth. She taught the Grantley Dick Read method of natural
birth to medical students from the 1940s, and was an adviser to
the Childbirth Education Association well ahead of most others in
the medical profession. Her interest in nutrition included a close
study of the therapeutic benefits of vitamins E and C. She never
shirked controversy and answered her critics with well-reasoned
and easily understood articles in the daily press. Her suggestion
that vitamin E might prevent cot deaths provoked considerable controversy.
She travelled to investigate overseas nutritional clinics and to
visit her widely dispersed and very talented family: three sons,
Raphael, Carl and David are doctors; Ruth is a doctor and a sculptor
and Diane is an actor. Lady Cilento retired from clinical practice
in 1964 but continued to write and advise on nutrition. She became
interested in chelation therapy in the treatment of heart disease
and adopted it herself. She died in Brisbane aged 93 on 26 July
1987.
Helen Gregory
Phyllis Cilento My Life 1987.
|