Medical Sciences Video Archive
Introduction
The Medical Sciences Video Archive of the Royal College of Physicians and Oxford Brookes University is a notable collection of videotaped biographical interviews with over 130 important figures in clinical medicine and science from the United Kingdom and Australia.
As two or more interviews have been recorded for certain interviewees, the collection now comprises approximately 200 interviews in total. Complete transcripts are available for many of the interviews.
The Archive, which was founded in 1985 in the School of Biological and Molecular Sciences, has been developed with major financial support from Oxford Brookes University and the Wellcome Trust.
History
Dr Max Blythe
The collection was founded in 1985 when Oxford Polytechnic (now Oxford Brookes University) and the Royal College of Physicians entered into a collaborative agreement to record on videotape interviews with Fellows of the College and distinguished medical scientists. Dr Max Blythe, a principal lecturer and then reader in the School of Biological and Molecular Sciences at the University, has been instrumental in founding and developing the collection. Early interviews were conducted by Max Blythe and Sir Gordon Wolstenholme, who was at that time Harveian Librarian at the College and responsible for the historical resources of the College.
In 1989 Sir Gordon Wolstenholme retired from the College but he continued to support the project as a visiting interviewer. Lord Walton of Detchant and Sir Christopher Booth, who succeeded Sir Gordon Wolstenholme as Harveian Librarian, became visiting interviewers in 1991, and since then a number of others have joined the interview team. Max Blythe has remained the principal interviewer.
Sir Gordon
Wolstenholme
Most of the interviews have been filmed and edited in the University's television studio, under the technical direction of David Dillon, the production officer in the Audio Visual Unit.
In 1992 the first international links were established with the Royal Australasian College of Physicians and the Australian Academy of Science. Max Blythe has conducted three programmes of interviews in Australia and the University has collaborated with the Academy in the Video Histories of Australian Scientists project.
In 1995 the Wellcome Trust awarded a grant to fund the development of the collection over the next two and a half years. This helped finance technical advances in filming and editing of tapes, and during this period the number of interviews recorded annually increased from approximately 10 to 30. As well as maintaining links with Australia, the project has had associations in the UK with the Nuffield Trust, the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Royal College of Anaesthetists. From 1995-98 interviews were conducted with 11 prominent British anaesthetists, providing a fascinating account of the development of anaesthesia as a speciality in the UK. A further series of interviews is planned.
The project has been assisted by a distinguished advisory board with members who have included: Sir James Gowans, Dame Bridget Ogilvie, Sir Rex Richards and the late Lord Phillips of Ellesmere.
The School of Biological and Molecular Sciences and the School of Humanities at Oxford Brookes University are currently involved in a joint project to publicise the Archive, and to transcribe and index interviews to improve access to the collection. The work is being carried out by Dr Carol Beadle and Susannah Wright, and is funded by a grant from the Wellcome Trust held by Professor Anne Digby of the School of Humanities.
Interviewees
Choose a letter to browse an alphabetical list of names.
The Medical Sciences Video Archive (MSVA) reference number(s) and details of the interview(s) for each interviewee may be obtained by clicking on their name. In many cases a synopsis of the interview is available. Synopses of the remaining interviews are currently being prepared, as are complete transcripts. The availability of a transcript in Oxford Brookes University Headington Library or on the website of the Australian Academy of Science is also indicated.
Simple searches for categories of medical scientists/practitioners have now been introduced.
Where a transcript is available from the Australian Academy of Science website, it is indicated by this image and a link to the site has been made.
Details of interviews and transcripts available in the University Library
Access
Videotapes are available for viewing, by prior arrangement, in the Oxford Brookes University Library and in the Centre for the History of Medicine Science and Society: Past and Present. Complete transcripts are available for some interviews and the remaining transcripts are now being edited as part of a Wellcome Trust funded project to archive the collection. Copies of the growing collection may also be accessed at the Medical Film and Video Library at the Wellcome Trust.
For further information please contact:Professor David Beadle
Links
| Collaborating Organisations | |
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The Royal College of Physicians |
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The Royal College of Anaesthetists |
| The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland | |
| Twenty major interviews have already been conducted in association with the Australian Academy of Science, some available on the Academy's own site. | |
| The Royal Australasian College of Physicians. | |
| Cyber Medical College - an online virtual healthcare education portal. | |
| National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists - information on the work of the Unit, located at the University of Bath. | |
| Nobel e-Museum - the official website of the Nobel Foundation. | |
| The Royal Society - the UK national academy of science website. | |
| UK Centre for the History of Nursing - information on the RCN Archive collections in Edinburgh. | |
| Vega Science Trust - Vega produces science programmes for TV and the internet focusing on the discoveries and concerns of people actively engaged in science, engineering and technology. |
Oxford Brookes University
