Marjory Warren
Quick Facts
Biography
Marjory Winsome Warren ( 28 October 1897–5 September 1960) is one of the first geriatricians and considered the mother of modern geriatric medicine.
Early life and career
Marjory was born in London, to Walter Richard Warren (a barrister) and his wife, Annie. She was the eldest of five daughters and attended the North London Collegiate School before studying medicine at the Royal Free Hospital, London. She initially trained in surgery, qualifying with an LRCP MRCS in 1923. After her residency at the Isleworth Infimary from 1926-1935, she took over the workhouse next door and formed the West Middlesex County Hospital. The following year she conducted an audit of the hundreds of patients in the wards, finding a cohort of delirious and demented patients who required beds with cot sides, severely incontinent patients, another cohort of were elderly and sick but eminently treatable, incontinent patients, and patients who were mobile throughout the day. During this time she developed a system of classification for these patients, including those who were suitable for rehabilitation and thus able to go home, and those who would require residential care (what we now refer to as nursing homes), and had particular success in rehabilitating stroke patients. This was a paradigm shift in the management of these patients who had previously been left to languish.
Geriatric medicine as a new specialty
In 1943 and 1946, Warren published two papers in the British Medical Journal, Warren argued for the creation of the specialty of geriatric medicine, specialist units in general hospitals, and medical education focusing on the care of elderly people by doctors with experience in the field. On the basis of these seminal papers, the Ministry of Health became involved in this emerging field, and in the 1950s, geriatric medicine was recognised as a medical specialty by the National Health Service (NHS). In 1947, she co-founded the Medical Society for the Care of the Elderly, now known as the British Geriatrics Society, and as founding chair, worked with committee president Lord Amulree, also a Ministry of Health officer who first recognised the importance of her work.
Warren promoted the importance of multidisciplinary team care, early mobilisation and active engagement of the older person in their daily activities, and the whole-person approach which included a patient's social and functional issues in addition to their medical issues. Warren and her colleagues were the first to suggest that all admissions to nursing homes and care facilities be approved following assessment on geriatric units (now standard) and advocated for the need to deal with the complex needs of the chronically ill or infirm older person with an integrated system. While this did not occur in her life time (approvals for residential homes were assigned to local government instead), it is now standard of care in the UK and Australia. Warren herself said . . . the needs of the elderly frequently fall between the two bodies – the individual being not sick enough to justify admission to hospital and yet too disabled or frail for a vacancy in a home.
Warren published goals for the healthcare of the elderly patient, which form the foundation of the principles of geriatric medicine;
'* To prevent disease whenever possible;
* To reduce medical disability to a minimum;
* To obtain and maintain maximum independence;
* To teach the patient to adjust himself intelligently to his residual disability'
Her commitment to patient care was not without conflict, many of her colleagues did not understand the value of importance of providing care for the largely neglected group of patients, and as a woman, with no further medical qualifications often struggled to get her views across. Geriatricians were referred to as members of “a second-rate specialty, looking after third rate patients in fourth-rate facilities” and were met with resistance from general physicians. However, as the ageing population increased, and the prospect that the current model of care would overwhelm government resources, the care of the elderly patient and subsequently those who had developed knowledge in their care, became of increasing interest at the NHS.
These ideas, and her system of classification, while now standard, were a departure from the former standard of care for the elderly who had previously been left to languish and was a paradigm shift for the profession. As a result, Warren garnered an international repute and received invitations around the world to lecture in the field and she served as International Secretary of the International Association of Gerontology.
Warren was remembered as an energetic and enthusiastic doctor who held her colleagues to high standards. She was highly active in many fields, nursing and nursing education, and worked as an examiner for the General Nursing Council, and was member of the London Association of the Medical Women's Federation, becoming it's president before her death.
Death
Warren died in a car accident on her way to a conference in Germany, dying in hospital Maizières-lès-Metz, France, on 5 September 1960 and a memorial service held on 1 October 1960 at St Pancras Church, London after being cremated in Strasbourg. She never married.