Jeanette Crossley
Jeanette Rosemary Crossley was a New Zealand biochemist, who pioneered the development of bloodspot tests for the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis. In 2009 Crossley was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to science, in particular Addison's disease.
Academic career
Crossley completed a PhD titled The nature of urinary insulin in normal and diabetic subjects at the University of Auckland in 1973. Crossley worked for DSIR and then with Bob Elliott and P. A. Smith in the paediatrics department of the University of Auckland, where she developed a test for elevated trypsin levels in newborns using blood spots. This enabled nationwide screening of newborns and early diagnosis of cystic fibrosis, allowing earlier treatment and subsequent improvements in prognosis.Crossley developed the New Zealand Addison's Network, a support network for New Zealanders with Addison's disease. She created a website and a newsletter issued three times a year, providing support for those with the disease. She also worked in paediatric diabetes research and was on the executive committee of the New Zealand Society for the Study of Diabetes.
In 1992 Crossley published a book about Matt Burke, a shepherd who worked on Ngamatea and Timahanga Stations.