James Mourilyan Tanner Explained

James Mourilyan Tanner
Birth Date:1920 8, df=yes
Birth Place:Camberley, Surrey, United Kingdom
Death Place:Wellington, Somerset, United Kingdom
Nationality:British
Field:Paediatric Endocrinology
Work Institutions:St Thomas' Hospital
UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health
Alma Mater:St Mary's Hospital Medical School
University of Pennsylvania
Known For:Tanner scale and later experiments in using human growth hormone in children.

James Mourilyan Tanner, (1 August 1920 – 11 August 2010) was a British paediatric endocrinologist who was best known for his development of the Tanner scale, which measures the stages of sexual development during puberty. He was a professor emeritus of the Institute of Child Health at the University of London.[1] [2]

Biography

Tanner was born on 1 August 1920 in Camberley, Surrey, United Kingdom and was educated at Marlborough College and University College of the South West of England. His family travelled widely while he was a youth because his father, a soldier in the British Army, was stationed in various locations. Tanner was a top-ranked hurdler who might well have participated in the 1940 Summer Olympics which were to be held in London, but were cancelled after the outbreak of World War II. He decided to become a doctor and not follow his father into the military after his brother was killed early in the war. He attended St Mary's Hospital, London, under a scholarship in which he instructed fellow students in physical education. He went to the United States to complete his medical studies as part of a group of British students funded by a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. He met his first wife, fellow physician Bernice Alture, while at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and performed his internship at Johns Hopkins Hospital.[3]

Tanner oversaw a study initiated by the British government at an orphanage in Harpenden starting in 1948. While the study had originally been planned to study the effects of malnutrition on children, Tanner charted and photographed the growth of the children in the study over a period of several years, developing the Tanner Scale, which measures sexual maturation in adolescents based on characteristics that can be objectively measured, including size of the genitals and the quantity of pubic hair.[3] The data gathered led to the development of the modern growth chart, used by paediatricians around the world to monitor the pattern of growth in children through adolescence, with separate curves measuring the growth trajectory for boys and girls identified as maturing early, normal or late.[4] Based on his research, Tanner noted that 90% of an individual child's adult height is based on genetic factors, but that the environment is the key factor when thousands of children are studied. By studying the growth characteristics of large populations, Tanner concluded that community-wide data on adult height was an indicator of how a society fosters its youths.[3]

Tanner did early research on the use of human growth hormone to address children whose growth was significantly delayed and was responsible for selecting the small handful of children in the UK who would be treated with the limited supply of HGH extracted from human cadavers.[3] [4] After a number of patients worldwide died in 1985 of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease linked to HGH treatments, Tanner immediately stopped the therapy, but had patients who insisted that they were willing to take the risk to address their child's delayed growth. Treatments resumed in the 1990s following the introduction of genetically engineered human growth hormone.[4]

Tanner died at age 90 on 11 August 2010 in Wellington, Somerset, due to a stroke and prostate cancer. He was survived by his second wife, Gunilla, as well as by a daughter, Helen Phillips, a stepdaughter, a stepson and three granddaughters.[3]

Publications

Tanner authored and co-authored numerous publications and contributions to publications, some of which are listed below.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Professor James Mourilyan Tanner. The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. 23 March 2018. 28 February 2017. 31 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171231212240/https://www.rcpch.ac.uk/paediatrician/professor-james-mourilyan-tanner. dead.
  2. James Mourilyan Tanner. Munks Roll – Lives of the Fellows. 21 August 2013. XII . 23 March 2018. Royal College of Physicians . Royal College of Physicians.
  3. Weber, Bruce. "Dr. James M. Tanner, an Expert in How Children Grow, Is Dead at 90", The New York Times, 23 August 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  4. Hall, Stephen S. "With His Bells and Curves, Human Growth Science Grew Up", The New York Times, 1 March 2005. Retrieved 24 August 2010.