Helen Dimsdale
Helen Dimsdale, née Brown, was a British neurologist who was not only the first woman appointed as a consultant at Maida Vale Hospital, she was the first to be named to a clinical neurological consultancy in Britain.
Life
Helen Easdale Dimsdale was born on 2 July 1907 at Stretford, Lancashire, England, the daughter of John Harold Brown and his wife Ellen Carseto. Helen was first educated at Culcheth Hall and Hayes Court before moving on to attend Girton College, Cambridge where she took a first in the Natural Science Tripos in 1929.She went to University College Hospital for clinical studies where she received her M.B., B.Chir. degrees in 1937. She had house appointments at UCH and Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital before she was appointed medical registrar at EAGH in 1938. Dimsdale trained throughout World War II at various hospitals in neuropathology until she became a consultant in 1946 at EAGH. The following year, she was appointed as a consultant at Maida Vale Hospital for Nervous Diseases and became the first woman to be appointed to a neurological consultancy in Britain. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1949.
She received her M.A. and M.D. degrees in 1949. She published a number of useful papers and also became a consultant at the Royal Free Hospital in 1950. Dimsdale continued to work at Maida Vale and the Royal Free until ill-health forced her retirement in 1967.
She authored "an influential series of 320 cases classifying the clinical features of parkinsonism."