Andrew_Doughty

Andrew Doughty

Andrew Doughty

English anaesthetist (1916–2013)


Andrew Gerald Doughty MRCS LRCP FRCA FRCOG (2 September 1916, Lincoln 2 June 2013)[1] was an English anaesthetist.

In 1957, he invented the Doughty gag, a modification of the Boyle-Davis gag for anaesthesia during adenotonsillectomy. It has a split blade, which allows use of an endotracheal tube and is in universal use to this day.[2][3] He was an early promoter of the use of epidural anaesthesia during childbirth.[4][5] In 1973, he set up an epidural course at Kingston Hospital. This two-week-long, one-on-one training course drew attendees from all over the world, and places had to be booked years in advance.[3]

He was born in 1916 in Lincoln and qualified from St Thomas's Hospital in 1941. In retirement Doughty lived in Thames Ditton.


References

  1. "DOUGHTY - Deaths Announcements - Telegraph Announcements".
  2. Doughty, Andrew (25 May 1957). "A modification of the tongue-plate of the Boyle-Davis gag". Lancet. 272 (6978): 1074. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(57)91445-9. PMID 13429880.
  3. Doughty, Andrew (1969). "Selective epidural analgesia and the forceps rate". British Journal of Anaesthesia. 41 (12): 1058–1062. doi:10.1093/bja/41.12.1058. PMID 5365524.
  4. Doughty, Andrew (1980). Epidural Analgesia in Obstetrics: A Second Symposium, University of Warwick, Coventry. London: Lloyd-Luke Medical Books.



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