Мы используем файлы cookie.
Продолжая использовать сайт, вы даете свое согласие на работу с этими файлами.
Ken Walker (physician)
Другие языки:

    Ken Walker (physician)

    Подписчиков: 0, рейтинг: 0

    Kenneth Francis Walker (born February 28, 1924) is a British-born Canadian medical writer, celebrity doctor, and retired obstetrician and gynecologist. As an author and columnist he publishes under the pen name W. Gifford-Jones, M.D..

    Background

    Walker was born in 1924 in Croydon, England. His family moved to Canada when he was 4, settling in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

    Walker earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Toronto and graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1950.

    Author and columnist

    He adopted the Gifford-Jones pseudonym when he wrote his first book in 1961, Hysterectomy: A Book for the Patient, due to the College of Physicians and Surgeons which ruled he could not publish a medical book under his own name as this would constitute advertising for patients and was not permitted under the college's rules. He went on to publish several more books under his pen name and used it when he launched his column, "The Doctor Game" in 1975 in the Globe and Mail in 1975. It was syndicated to over 40 newspapers by the end of the 1970s.

    The column appeared in the Globe and Mail until 1989 when it moved to the Toronto Sun. At its peak it was syndicated to over 85 newspapers in Canada, 300 newspapers in the United States, including the Chicago Sun-Times, and newspapers in Europe. He has also written nine books, has been a senior editor of Canadian Doctor magazine, and was a regular contributor to Fifty Plus magazine.

    The Postmedia chain, including the Toronto Sun discontinued the Gifford-Jones column at the end of 2019. It continues to be published online and in some other newspapers such as the Westerly Sun and the Prince Albert Daily Herald and has been co-authored with his daughter, Diana, since 2020.

    Campaigns and advocacy

    While practicing in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Walker was an advocate of women's right to choose abortion and was an abortion practitioner in the area after the procedure became legal in 1969, resulting in death threats from abortion opponents.

    In 1979, he began campaigning for the legalization of heroin as a painkiller for terminal cancer patients through his column, by creating the Gifford-Jones Foundation to raise money for the campaign and through newspaper advertisements and collecting 30,000 names on a petition and soliciting 20,000 letters from his readers in support of his efforts.

    Walker has also advocated the right to assisted suicide and euthanasia and is a member of the physicians advisory council of Dying with Dignity Canada.

    At age 73, Walker suffered a serious heart attack, and soon after had a triple bypass. He rejected the recommended statin therapy, which he felt has terrible side effects, so he parted company with his cardiologist. He remembered one of his interviews as a medical journalist with Linus Pauling, who told him that humans do not make vitamin C. So, he began a regimen of 10 grams of vitamin C, and 5 grams of the amino acid lysine, which he claimed saved his life.

    Controversies

    In 1986, Walker participated in a "fact finding" tour of South Africa sponsored by the apartheid government. Upon his return he wrote an op-ed in the Globe and Mail titled "The good side of white South Africa" which opposed sanctions against or disinvestment from South Africa and also opposed the prospect of ending white minority rule in the country.

    In 2018, the Toronto Sun pulled a Gifford-Jones column from its website following an outcry over its urging readers to consider "both sides of the vaccine debate". Sun editor Adrienne Batra said it was removed from the newspaper's website after medical professionals pointed out inaccuracies in the column. By 2021, Gifford-Jones was taking a stronger position in favor of vaccination writing "I have never been against vaccination and proven science" and in regards towards COVID-19 vaccines "the risk is so, so minimal versus the risk of dying unvaccinated".

    Later life

    Walker retired from his practice at the age of 87 and currently lives in Toronto's Harbourfront neighbourhood with his wife of more than 60 years.

    Bibliography

    • 90+ How I Got There! by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 2015
    • What I Learned as a Medical Journalist: a collection of columns by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 2013
    • You’re Going to do What?: The Memoir of Dr. W. Gifford-Jones by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 2000, ECW Press
    • The Healthy Barmaid by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 1995, ECW Press
    • Medical Survival by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 1985, Methuen
    • What Every Woman Should Know About Hysterectomy by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 1977, Funk & Wagnalls, New York
    • The Doctor Game by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 1975, McClelland & Stewart
    • On Being A Woman – The Modern Woman’s Guide to Gynecology by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 1969, Book of the Month Club selection (Canada and U.S.)
    • Hysterectomy? - A Book for the Patient by W. Gifford-Jones, M.D., 1961, University of Toronto Press

    External links


    Новое сообщение