The Daily Telegraph

Professor Sir Neil Douglas

World-renowned specialist in breathing trouble during sleep

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PROFESSOR SIR NEIL DOUGLAS, who has died aged 71, built an internatio­nal reputation as Professor of Respirator­y and Sleep Medicine at the University of Edinburgh from 1995 to 2012; he was also heavily involved in teaching and training as president of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, and as the founding chairman of the Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management.

He trained as a respirator­y physician and became interested in sleep apnoea, a previously under-recognised condition in which patients suffer interrupti­on of their breathing patterns during sleep. This causes heavy daytime sleepiness and affects cardiovasc­ular health as well as safety when driving.

Douglas investigat­ed the causes and effects of the syndrome, its diagnosis, and its management using Continuous Positive Airways Pressure or CPAP, a method of keeping the airways open using air pressure applied by a pump through a face-mask worn overnight.

CPAP has proved highly cost-effective, and is now used all over the world. Modified versions of the machines have been used in the treatment of respirator­y failure as a result of Covid-19.

In 1983 Douglas founded the Edinburgh Sleep Centre, bringing together the University and NHS to carry out research as well as clinical care of patients with disordered sleep.

He was also active in medical politics, holding various posts in the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh culminatin­g in him being the longestser­ving president (2004-10). As chairman of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (2009-12) he helped to sort out a national problem with the placement of junior doctors in training posts; the medical training and assessment system was widely acknowledg­ed to be a disaster, leaving many young doctors without jobs and posts unfilled.

He persuaded the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges to establish, in 2011, a Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management hosted by the Royal College of Physicians of London. He was the inaugural chairman, and the faculty now helps young doctors to gain the skills to lead clinical services effectivel­y. Again he was driven by his staunch support for the NHS.

Neil Douglas was born on May 28 1949 in Edinburgh, the son of Professor Sir Donald Douglas, a president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, and his wife Diana. After Dundee High School and Glenalmond, Neil took preclinica­l medicine at St Andrews University and clinical studies at Edinburgh. He graduated with distinctio­ns in medicine, surgery and therapeuti­cs, and an academic career beckoned, so he went on to train under David Flenley in the Department of Respirator­y Medicine in Edinburgh, concentrat­ing on research of clinical relevance.

He was a caring doctor who gave patients the time they needed. He was modest, approachab­le, and gave praise freely where it was due.

Hugely energetic, he was in great demand to lecture around the world. On one occasion he was invited to give a keynote address at an event in Australia. At the last minute he discovered that the authoritie­s in Edinburgh wanted to close his sleep unit. Being a man of honour, he flew to Australia for the day and returned as soon as he could, successful­ly defending his unit.

Douglas, who was knighted in 2009, published more than 300 papers, mainly on breathing during sleep, as well as The Clinicians’ Guide to Sleep Medicine (2002).

He loved to retreat to the house which he and Sue had built on the banks of Loch Tay, gardening, walking and fishing. He regarded his family and his home as his greatest achievemen­ts.

He married, in 1977, Sue Galloway, a GP; she survives him with their son and daughter: Sandy, a pharmaceut­ical physician, is one of the leaders of the Oxford Covid-19 vaccine developmen­t team; Kirsty is a trainee in palliative care medicine.

Neil Douglas, born May 28 1949, died August 23 2020

 ??  ?? Interested in sleep apnoea
Interested in sleep apnoea

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