Benjamin Guy Babington
Benjamin Guy Babington was an English physician and epidemiologist.
Life
Benjamin Babington was born on 5 March 1794, the son of the physician and mineralogist William Babington and his wife, Martha Elizabeth Babington.After serving as a midshipman and studying at Charterhouse School from 1803 to 1807 and then the East India Company College at Haileybury until 1812, he worked in government at Madras, India. Returning to England, he studied medicine at Guy's Hospital and Cambridge, receiving his doctorate in 1831. He then became Assistant Physician at Guy's but resigned after a disagreement in 1855. During his career, he invented several medical instruments and techniques. He performed the first laryngoscopy with his glottiscope in 1829. He became a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians. According to Henry Morley, he also "distinguished himself by inquiries into the cholera epidemic in 1832".
He was Secretary to The Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland and in March, 1828 elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 1834–1836 he was President of the Hunterian Society. He was a censor and Croonian Lecturer at the Royal College of Physicians. In 1850 he was elected the founding President of the Epidemiological Society of London and served in that capacity to within months of his death. At least one authority refers to the founding as the beginning of modern epidemiology. In 1853–1855 he was president of the Pathological Society of London and 1863 was also president of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society.
Babington died on 8 April 1866.
Publications
He wrote several papers, and translated several others, including:- four papers from Justus Friedrich Karl Hecker's Epidemics of the Middle Ages.
- Ernst, Baron von Feuchtersleben's ''Principles of Medical Psychology.''
Family