Sir
Gilbert Blane (1749—1834)
Scottish
physician, was born at Blanefield, Ayrshire, on the 29th of August
1749. He was educated at Edinburgh university, and shortly after
his removal to London became private physician to Lord Rodney,
whom he accompanied to the West Indies in 1779. He did much to
improve the health of the fleet by attention to the diet of the
sailors and by enforcing due sanitary precautions, and it was
largely through him that ill 1795 the use of lime-juice was made
obligatory throughout the navy as a preventive of scurvy.
Enjoying
a number of court and hospital appointments he built up a good
practice for himself in London, and the government constantly
consulted him on questions of public hygiene. He was made a baronet
in 1812 in reward for the services he rendered in connexion with
the return of the Walcheren expedition. He died in London on the
26th of June 1834. Among his works were Observations on the Diseases
of Seamen (1795) and Elements of Medical Logic (1819).
|