PROFESSOR WILHELMINA
M H BEHAN MD FRCP FRCPath
Wilhelmina Mary
Harcourt Behan died on March 19th 2005
in Glasgow, United
Kingdom at the age of 66. She was a recognised
international authority on muscle pathology. Her interest was in neuromuscular
diseases, initially in their immunopathological features
and subsequently in viral infections of muscle. She contributed extensively
to viral investigations in both polymyositis and more
latterly, chronic fatigue syndrome. Her research contributions included over
170 publications and the chapter on muscle in Muir’s textbook of Pathology.
She was also a reviewer of manuscripts and grant applications relating to advanced
muscle research. Mina applied her research skills to diagnostic cases and was
first to diagnose AIDS at postmortem in Scotland. Her clinical skills were
remarkable and she was personally congratulated by the eminent Harvard Professor,
Benjamin Castleman, for diagnosing the smallest malignant thymoma ever seen. In addition, she set up a specialised
muscle clinic to which patients were referred from throughout Britain.
Mina, the daughter of the distinguished physician Dr William Hughes, was born
in 1939 in London. She was the granddaughter
of the Mayor of Westminster, Reverend Frederick Harcourt Hillersdon,
and her mother’s family can be traced back to the Norman Invasion of 1066.
She had a distinguished academic career which began with the award of a First
Trust Scholar of Great Britain Public Day School Trust in 1956. She later won
an open scholarship to study at Bristol
University and was one
of the few women to study Medicine at that time. As a student, she won the
University Martin Memorial Pathology Prize and First Prizes in Anaesthetics
and Obstetrics. At her Finals in 1962 she took a First Class Honours Degree
with Distinctions in Pathology and Medicine and was awarded the University Gold
Medal. After house jobs at the Professorial Units at Bristol Royal Infirmary
she went to Cambridge University
from 1963 to 1966 as a trainee in Pathology. It was while she was in Cambridge
that she met a neurologist, Peter Behan, whom she
married. They travelled to the USA where she spent two years as a Senior Resident
in Pathology at Harvard Medical School
and was appointed Pathologist in Chief of the Veterans
Administrations Hospital,
Brockton, Massachusetts
from 1968 to 1971. Following this she was Assistant Professor of Pathology,
Boston University
Medical School
from 1971 to 1973. In 1974, on returning to the United
Kingdom, Mina joined the Department of Pathology at Glasgow University
as Lecturer and subsequently, Senior Lecturer and Professor.
Mina was an extremely popular Professor at Glasgow
University both to colleagues
and students alike. She organised the Honours BSc course in Molecular and Cellular
Pathology with the chief aim of training young scientists and medical students
to carry out high quality research. In 1999, she set up a second course on
“Unusual Infections of the Nervous System” and both courses were always oversubscribed.
She supervised numerous higher degrees during which her students were taught
to speak clearly and confidently. She ensured that they always had projects
which led to excellent theses and publications.
Throughout her life Mina was extremely hardworking
and demonstrated enormous dedication and organisational skills. Although highly
successful, she remained a modest and quietly spoken woman who was devoted to
her family. She had an encyclopaedic knowledge of Jane Austen, Charles Dickens
and Henry James. She died after a long and cruel illness which she bore with
enormous courage. She is survived by her husband (a retired Professor of Neurology),
three children (a neurology specialist registrar, a cardiology specialist registrar
and a medical senior house officer) and two grandchildren.
Wilhemina
M H Behan. Pathologist and researcher.
Born February 11, 1939. Died March
19, 2005.