William Brady | |
Birth Date: | March 26, 1880 |
Birth Place: | Canandaigua, New York |
Death Date: | February 25, 1972 |
Death Place: | Beverly Hills, California |
Occupation: | Physician, columnist |
William Brady (March 26, 1880 February 25, 1972) was an American physician and pioneering medical columnist.[1]
Brady was born in Canandaigua, New York.[2] He obtained his M.D. from the University of Buffalo in 1901.[2] He began his medical practice in Buffalo, New York, in 1901. In 1904, he married Cora May McGuire, they had two daughters.[3]
In 1914, Brady started the first syndicated medical column "Personal Health Service" in the Elmira Star-Gazette, which he wrote until his death in 1972.[4] Brady was "America's oldest columnist, in age and in number of years of syndication."[4] He wrote the medical column for 58 years.[5] It was syndicated in daily newspapers throughout the United States.[2]
Brady also edited the medical column "Here's to Health" in the Los Angeles Times.[6] In this column, Brady supported the consumption of saccharin. He recommended it as a substitute for "stout people who are trying to reduce and those who wish to avoid accumulating more slacker flesh".[7] In 1946, he commented that there was "ample scientific evidence" to suggest that anyone could consume up to five grains of saccharine a day.[7] He wrote articles recommending people to take iodine doses. Brady was also supportive of the meat diet of Vilhjalmur Stefansson.[8] In his 1961 book, Brady admitted he held "strange notions" that were based on a "lifetime of sometimes unorthodox observation and practice are geared to keeping patients out of doctors' offices."[9] He died of uremia at his home in Beverly Hills, California.[2]
Brady was criticized by other physicians for making misrepresentations about medical treatments and promoting dubious health advice. A 1937 article in the Journal of the American Medical Association commented that Brady "has during recent years gradually departed from anything resembling accuracy or established medical science."[10]
A 1946 article in the Journal of the American Dental Association noted that:
The Southern California State Dental Association accused Brady of misinforming his readers on specific dental ailments.[11]