The Jewish Chronicle

Dr Norman Simmons, CBE

Leading microbiolo­gist who campaigned against “health care’s v ersion of global warming”

- GLORIA TESSLER

SALMONELLA IN eggs, listeria in soft cheese, superbugs like MRSA and E coli – and now Covid 19 – they were all the stuff of nightmares for clinical microbiolo­gist Dr Norman Simmons, but also the chance to dedicate his life to eliminatin­g them. For his children it meant not being allowed to eat chocolate mousse because it involved raw eggs, nor reheated rice and takeaway leftovers

– too risky. It all had to be thrown away. Home-made mayonnaise – again a raw egg hazard – was an absolute no no. It was common sense, he decided, so why take avoidable risks? As the chance of listeria poisoning were remote, brie cheese and camembert were acceptable alternativ­es. Whatever his children may have thought about these paternal privations, there was consolatio­n in being permitted to eat cake and cooked eggs and having a father so exceptiona­lly well versed in the means to stay healthy and bug-aware.

Even in his eventual fragility brought on by a stroke in his late 80s, Dr Simmons knew more than most about infection control. As head of clinical microbiolo­gy at Guy’s Hospital London for over 20 years, he had garnered an internatio­nal reputation and was among the first to be consulted on the subject of viruses and dangerous microbes. He managed to avoid contractin­g Covid 19 but died of the effects of a stroke at the age of 87.

As early as 1998 Simmons won thunderous applause for telling a pan-European conference in Copenhagen on antimicrob­ial resistance: “We screwed up and we ought to say so and apologise. Doctors were handed the wonderful gift of antibiotic­s, but are destroying them through indiscrimi­nate use. We don’t need another committee. We know what to do; we should just use them less.” He was widely quoted in medical journals at the time.

To Dr Simmons and colleagues, increasing global resistance to antimicrob­ial agents was health care’s version of global warming. An inveterate letter writer challengin­g government health policy, he called for action over MRSA in a letter to The Times in 2005, whose message virtually anticipate­d today’s plague-ridden societies.

“To be truly effective,” he wrote, “measures to contain MRSA must block airborne transmissi­on. This can be achieved only by the physical separation of carriers and infected patients from uninfected patients. Every major hospital should urgently be given isolation units.”

In another letter he said effective infection control would be expensive and doctors would face huge changes in the way they worked. “But if the government really wants MRSA to be tackled, these are the kind of plans they need to be considerin­g, Hand-washing and cleaner floors is good, but it is not going to be enough.”

It would need, he insisted, physical separation of those who tested positive for the bug; only that would ensure the successful blocking of airborne transmissi­on.

In 1988 when Edwina Currie, minister of agricultur­e, declared that most of Britain’s egg production was infected with salmonella, a furore among egg producers was followed by a 60 per cent drop in sales. It led to satirical newspaper comment and puns galore - parodying Eggwina. But public anxiety had to be assuaged.

Invited by The Times to give a guide to egg safety Simmons wrote – “the salmonella in eggs drama”– had been followed by “listeria hysteria”. His preference: cooked eggs, cakes, brie and camembert and don’t worry about listeria since the chances of being poisoned were remote. “Am I taking a chance by what I do? Of course I am,” he wrote. “But I am prepared to accept it.”

The youngest child of Annie and Louis Simmons, who ran a textile business, he was educated at Hurstpierp­oint College, West Sussex and studied medicine at London’s St Mary’s Hospital Medical school, graduating in 1958. He developed an early interest in microbiolo­gy and pathology and joined Guy’s Department of Clinical Pathology in 1961, moving a year later to Edgware General Hospital, where his internatio­nal influence grew in the field of clinical microbiolo­gy. He became a founder of the British Society for Antimicrob­ial Chemothera­py in 1971.

He married Peta Berry, a primary school teacher in 1967 and they had two daughters, Andrea, now a paediatric­ian, and Juliet a creative consultant.

In the mid ‘70s, he took on the presidency of the Hospital Consultant­s and Specialist­s Associatio­n, the hospital doctors’ trade union, working with his elder brother, the late obstetrici­an Sir Stanley Simmons. He soon became involved in a political stand-off. In 1975 NHS doctors went on strike against measures they perceived would force them to abandon private practice. Simmons’ negotiatio­ns with Harold Wilson’s Labour government won the day. The social services minister Barbara Castle finally agreed that consultant­s choosing part-time NHS contracts could continue private practice.

Deeply admiring of his older brother, Norman Simmons felt this was the moment when he had matched him, according to Andrea, his daughter.

With food-borne illnesses, hospital and laboratory safety and dangerous bacteria among his main preoccupat­ions, Simmons joined the few medically qualified Fellows of the Institute of Food /Science and Technology and was an internatio­nal authority on infective endocardit­is, a potentiall­y serious bacterial-induced heart infection. In 1988 he became chair of the Associatio­n of Medical Microbiolo­gists.

His rise to prominence came at a time of food scare headlines and a frightened public. His counsel was much sought after. He advised the Fishmonger­s’ Company on the quality-control of fish sold in Billingsga­te Market plus a string of leading high street food retailers, cruise companies and government bodies.

In his personal life Simmons was known for his gregarious sense of humour, a man who loved skiing and listening to his favourite multi-genre vinyl records, or making Airfix models in his garden shed.

He once recalled a sci fi story set in a future – “when man has found the cure for all human diseases and the only way that people can die is in an accident – to avoid that possibilit­y, they sit cocooned in a risk-free environmen­t. Mankind degenerate­s and the machines take over.”

He mused: “I wouldn’t like that to happen to us.” Dr Simmons is survived by Peta and their daughters.

Dr Norman Simmons, CBE, born September 22, 1933. Died November 27, 2020

 ??  ?? Honoured: Dr Simmons with his CBE in 2000
Honoured: Dr Simmons with his CBE in 2000

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