Basil Hetzel

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The Honorable Dr Basil Hetzel AC (born 1922) is an Australian medical researcher who has made a major contribution to combating iodine deficiency, a major cause of goitre and cretinism world wide.

[edit] Study and career

He graduated in medicine from the University of Adelaide in the 1940s and had a productive career as medical researcher, public health advocate and in administration:

    • Reader and then Michell Professor of Medicine at The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University of Adelaide
    • Foundation Professor of Social and Preventive Medicine at Monash University
    • first Chief of the CSIRO Division of Human Nutrition.
  • with his team, he worked among the people of the mountains of Papua New Guinea with the Public Health Department of the then Territory and showed that goitre was due to iodine deficiency and building on that work that the associated form of severe mental retardation, cretinism, could be completely prevented by correction of the iodine deficiency before pregnancy.
  • conducted a worldwide campaign to incorporate iodized salt into the diet of those communities where iodine is lacking, and where intellectual disability and deformity result.
  • 1980s as a public health campaigner, supported by AusAID he convinced governments, the United Nations, UNICEF, the World Health Organization, the World Bank and community groups to provided funds and support. There is now a global partnership, the International Council for Control of Iodine Deficiency Disorders, which had achieved coverage of 70% of households by 2000.

In administration:

As a public educator, he:

He says his deep personal Christian commitment has informed his life.

[edit] Honours

He has been widely honoured:

[edit] External links

Source: Biography at the Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre