Curry Cabral | |
Honorific-Suffix: | ComSE |
Office: | Chief Infirmarer of Saint Joseph's Hospital |
Predecessor: | José Joaquim da Silva Amado |
Successor: | Augusto de Vasconcelos |
Term Start: | 7 January 1901 |
Term End: | 6 October 1910 |
Birth Name: | José Curry da Câmara Cabral |
Birth Date: | 4 May 1844 |
Birth Place: | São Mamede, Lisbon, Portugal |
Death Place: | Lisbon, Portugal |
Nationality: | Portuguese |
Occupation: | Physician and professor |
José Curry da Câmara Cabral (4 May 1844 – 18 May 1920), better known simply as Curry Cabral, was a Portuguese physician, and one of the most famous medical researchers and professors in the country. An eminent clinician, he was one of the most prestigious figures in Portuguese medicine in the early 20th century, alongside Sousa Martins, Manuel Bento de Sousa, and Oliveira Feijão.
José Curry da Câmara Cabral was born in São Mamede, Lisbon on 4 May 1844, the son of Alberto Curry da Câmara Cabral and his wife, Mariana Adelaide Runquist Cabral. His paternal family was from Faial Island, in the Azores, and descended from Andrew Curry, a British subject who had settled in the Azores in the 18th century, establishing familial relations with influent local families, namely the Arriagas. Curry Cabral was baptized in the Parish Church of São Mamede, on 16 May 1844.[1]
Curry Cabral lived most of his life in Lisbon, where he enrolled in the city's in 1864. A brilliant student, he defended his thesis on 23 July 1869,[2] titled "As feridas articulares e a cirurgia conservadora" ("Articular injuries and conservative surgery"), which was later published.
Curry Cabral started working at Saint Joseph's Hospital on 7 February 1870, as an emergency room surgeon, promoted on 10 December 1874 to the post of surgeon extraordinary. On 2 July 1885, he was put in charge of an infirmary until he was named the Hospital's Chief Infirmarer (Enfermeiro-Mor) in 1900; he was only dismissed from this post following the 5 October 1910 revolution, to be replaced by Augusto de Vasconcelos.[3] [4] In this leadership post, Curry Cabral staged a reform of the hospital's administrative system, and saw that new inpatient care guidelines were enforced in all the hospitals in the country.[5] Also one of his first preoccupations was the creation of a Division of Medical Statistics, from which we can still today have a glimpse at the casuistry of early 20th-century Lisbon surgeons.[6] In addition to his work at Saint Joseph's, he also worked as a head surgeon at Queen Stephanie's Hospital.[5] [2]
His academic career started with a nomination, on 11 December 1873, to curate the Medical-Surgical School's Museum of Anatomy. He became a professor in 1876, teaching Surgery ("Operatory Medicine") and Anatomical Pathology.[5] [2]
He published several scientific works, and was one of the editors of the weekly medical journal Medicina Contemporânea ("Contemporary Medicine") in 1883. His notoriety as a scientist and professor led to several memberships in national and foreign scientific societies such as the Societé d'Hygiene de Paris and the Lisbon Royal Academy of Sciences. He served as President of the Lisbon Society of Medical Sciences from 1898 to 1900. He was also a member of the country's Superior Council of Public Instruction, an executive of the National Assistance to the Tuberculous, and a member of the Superior Council of Health and Public Hygiene.[5] [2]
He was a great proponent for the establishment of a specialised hospital to treat tuberculosis and other communicable diseases: such an hospital was established in 1906, by Hintze Ribeiro's Regenerator government, in a plot of land that had originally belonged to an old Franciscan nunnery, the Convent of Our Lady of Sorrows. The hospital was at first known as Rego Hospital, named after the neighbourhood where it was located; in 1929 it was renamed Hospital Curry Cabral.[7]
In 1904, Curry Cabral was made a Commander of the Order of Saint James of the Sword.[5]
In addition to his numerous papers and scientific lectures published in specialised journals, he authored the following works:[5] [8]