Rochdale Observer

First test tube baby’s tribute to ‘forgotten’ IVF pioneer

- Steve.robson@men-news.co.uk @SteveRobso­n04

THE world’s first test tube baby born in Oldham General Hospital has paid tribute to the ‘forgotten’ pioneer who helped develop IVF treatment.

Louise Brown, 39, was born on July 25 1978 after her parents Lesley and John became the first people to successful­ly undergo in vitro fertilisat­ion (IVF).

Her conception, at Dr Kershaw’s Cottage Hospital in Royton, made headlines around the world.

Her birth attracted controvers­y, with religious leaders expressing concern about the use of artificial interventi­on and some raising fears that science was creating “Frankenbab­ies”, but also paved the way for around eight million IVF births across the world to date.

It was the result of 12 years of pioneering research by the late Dr Patrick Steptoe, a gynaecolog­ist at Oldham, and Cambridge researcher Dr Robert Edwards.

But Mrs Brown, now a mother-of-two living in Bristol with her husband, Wesley Mullinder, said that the contributi­on of a third ‘hero,’ embryologi­st Jean Purdy, deserved greater recognitio­n.

Purdy, who was initially hired as a lab technician by Edwards, was the first person to witness the successful cell division of the embryo that would become Louise Brown.

She co-authored 26 academic papers about IVF and helped found the Bourn Hall fertility clinic in Cambridges­hire, but is rarely mentioned in the story of IVF.

Purdy died in 1985, aged 39.

Mrs Brown, who works as a clerk at a freight company, said: “Jean Purdy was, I was told by my mum, the one who saw all the cells dividing which is now me.

“Without her I don’t think IVF would have taken off. I know Bob and Patrick used to go home to their wives and families and I think it was Jean that used to stay and make sure everything was just as it should have been.”

She described them as “three great people” and said she hopes Purdy “gets the recognitio­n she deserves now”.

She was speaking at Bourn Hall to mark 40 years of IVF, and earlier laid flowers at Purdy’s new memorial at the Church of St Andrew and St Mary in Grantchest­er, where she is buried.

There was previously a simple headstone which did not Purdy’s work.

Steptoe died in 1988 aged 74, and Edwards died in 2013 aged 87.

Edwards, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2010 for the developmen­t of IVF, had previously said “there were three original pioneers in IVF not just two”.

“They should have all been recognised more than they were,” Mrs Brown said. She said her parents received “weird” mail over the years, including a package from California containing a broken test tube with a foetus and fake blood, but that she had never had any “nasty” approaches and “definitely not recently”.

“I think there’s so many IVF children now that I think it’s a lot more acknowledg­e accepted now 40 years on than it was when I was born,” she said.

“I think everybody’s sort of moved mostly with the times.”

Grace MacDonald, mother of Alastair MacDonald, the second ever IVF baby and first ever IVF baby boy, who was born on January 14 1979, said Purdy deserved more recognitio­n but she would not have minded the lack of it.

“I always got the feeling that she loved being part of it all but she loved being in the background,” she said. “She never sought or wanted to be a star although to me she always was as she was the one I felt that held it all together, kept the notes, looked after the girls at that time.

“She just had an amazing way about her.”

 ??  ?? ●●Louise Brown at a press conference to mark her 40th birthday last week at the Science Museum in London
●●Louise Brown at a press conference to mark her 40th birthday last week at the Science Museum in London

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