Last week I had
the pleasure of talking to Dr. Brian Maguire, now in his 81st
year. A retired medical doctor, former
dispensary doctor for Moone and later Athy west, Dr. Brian is a man for whom I
have great admiration. A dedicated
doctor he nevertheless found time to involve himself in his local community and
the community has been enriched by his contribution over the years.
A graduate of the
College of Surgeons in Dublin, Brian went to England in 1948 to gain further
training, qualifications and practical experience to enable him to eventually
set up as a General Practitioner in his own country. Time spent in the Royal Infirmary in Halifax
four years after the ending of World War II and while food restrictions were
still in place, proved an enjoyable experience, even if not a gastronomic
treat. Six months further training in
maternity in Heathfield Hospital, Birmingham followed before he joined the
newly opened paediatric unit in the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin under the
legendary, Dr. Robert Collis. Collis was
part of the medical team which followed the troops into Belsen Concentration
Camp in 1945 and he it was who brought a number of orphaned children back to
Ireland at the end of the war.
Dr. Brian spent
thirteen months in the Rotunda Unit and while there he took driving lessons so
that he could drive the Hillman Commer van used in travelling throughout Dublin
city collecting breast milk to be stored for use by infants in the hospital
unit. It was an innovative scheme at the
time and similar to the one which was commenced with much fanfare and publicity
in Northern Ireland within the last few years.
His return to
Birmingham was prompted by a need to gain a Diploma in child care and a
Certificate in public health, necessary qualifications for someone with
aspirations to become a dispensary doctor.
It was while there that he met his future wife Megan with whom he will
soon be celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary.
While an assistant
in a general practice in Birmingham he became involved with the Irish
association in that city. At the same
time he kept an eye on the advertisements in the Irish newspaper, all the time
hoping to return to Ireland if a suitable dispensary position arose. He applied for the position of Dispensary
Doctor in the Moone area, and following an interview with the Local
Appointments Commission was offered the job.
County Councils were then responsible for the administration of the
health services, and the then County Manager, Matthew Macken, indicated that
the fine dispensary house at Ballitore occupied by the previous holder of the
position, Dr. Gardiner, could not be repaired due to lack of funds. As a result Dr. Brian was allowed to live
outside his dispensary area in Athy.
He stayed in the
Leinster Arms Hotel for thirteen months before taking a flat over Bradbury’s
Bakery in Stanhope Street. It was then
that Megan and the children joined him and it was from there in 1963 that the
Maguire family moved to Aughaboura to the house previously owned by Paddy
Kavanagh. Dr. Bill Cowhey who was
Dispensary Doctor in Fontstown had a private practice based in Jo and Frank
Gibbons’ house in Emily Row and when Dr. Cowhey left the area, Brian acquired
his private medical practice.
A member of the
Council of the Irish Medical Association for several years as well as a member
of the organising committee of the Irish Medical Journal, Dr. Brian served on
the Consultative Committee on General Practice established by the Minister for
Health Erskine Childers in the late 1960’s.
The recommendations in that report contributed to the discussions which
led to the abolition of the dispensary system ten years later. Before its total abolition the amalgamation
of the Moone and Fontstown dispensary districts with the town of Athy led to
the creation of Athy east and Athy west dispensary districts, the latter of
which became Dr. Brian’s responsibility.
Nurse Teresa Brennan, the former jubilee nurse, worked with him in Athy
west and when he referred to her it was in terms of her extensive local
knowledge and the strength, devotion and goodness she brought to her role as a
dispensary nurse.
A doctor on his
rounds finds people at their most vulnerable and nowhere more so than the
elderly person living along, sometimes in impoverished if not primitive
conditions. Conditions in Ireland in the
1950’s were far more primitive than that found in England even a decade or two
earlier. The days of the Celtic Tiger
were still far off and what Dr. Brian found on his rounds prompted him to
approach the then Parish Priest, Fr. Steen to highlight the need of the elderly
in our local community. Brian’s desire
to help those in need led to a public meeting in St. John’s Hall in 1965 which
was addressed by the County Medical Officer, Dr. Brendan O’Donnell. A local Care of the Elderly Committee was
formed in the town, the first Chairman of which was Dr. Brian Maguire who would
continue in that position for the next twenty years or so. In time the Committee purchased 82 Leinster
Street from the Duke of Leinster with funds donated by local generous
benefactors and from there, various voluntary services were to be provided for
the elderly of the Athy district.
The Asian flu
epidemic of 1971/72 provided Dr. Brian and the other local doctor, Dr. Joe
O’Neill, with one of the most trying and difficult periods of the last few
decades. The first victim of the flu was
treated on 23rd December 1971 and for the next four days neither
doctor had any rest or respite as stricken patient after patient was attended
and treated in a frantic attempt to halt the worst excesses of the
epidemic. An earlier strain of Asian flu
struck 53 years previously causing more deaths worldwide than was lost during
the 1914/18 War. Even as he recounts
over thirty years later that “I lost one
patient during that epidemic”, one is conscious of the sense of regret
which underscores the words. But surely
a doctor is accustomed to the regularity of death and does not feel as we who
do not share in that experience week in week out. But death, no matter how familiar, no matter
how frequent, brings sadness in its wake to the caring compassionate
doctor. It was that same compassion
which prompted the founding of the Care of the Elderly Committee, the local
organisation which continues to this day to provide services and comforts for
elderly persons living alone.
Throughout his
life Dr. Brian has been a caring person who involved himself. Firstly as a medical student in Dublin he was
President of the I.M.A. College Students Association and recalls with pride his
attendance at a conference in London just after the war addressed by the former
miner and one time editor of the Tribune, the legendary Aneurin Bevan. It was Bevan who as Minister for Health
presided over the creation of the National Health Services in Britain.
Then there was his
membership of the I.M.A. Council and the organising committee of the Irish
Medical Journal, not to mention his chairmanship of the Athy Development
Association in the 1970’s. This latter
group helped establish the first industrial estate in Athy just beyond St.
Vincent’s Hospital.
His involvement in
establishing the Care of the Elderly Committee and his work on that committee
over two decades is apart from his work as a local doctor, perhaps his greatest
contribution to the local community. Indeed the Maguire household has not one
but two whose lives for almost fifty years were inextricably linked with the
community amongst which they came to live in 1957. Both Dr. Brian and his Welsh born wife Megan
have contributed hugely to the well being of their adopted town of Athy.
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