The Scotsman

David Player

Doctor who teamed up with Scotland squad to promote anti-smoking message

- ALISON SHAW

David Arnott Player, physician and public health pioneer. Born: April 2 1927 in Glasgow. Died: October 2 2020 in Edinburgh, aged 93

When David Player returned from Scotland’s 1982 World Cup foray the country had experience­d its habitual first round exit, but he came home triumphant, having achieved his own spectacula­r success.

As an ardent football fan, passionate anti-smoking campaigner and director of the Scottish Health Education Unit, he and his colleagues had sponsored the national team under the slogan “The Squad Don’t Smoke”. They were officially the World Cup’s first anti-smoking side and sported anti-smoking logos on their kit, appeared in anti-smoking posters, TV and radio adverts and flew the flag for their healthy stance, taking a giant balloon, emblazoned with the message and a lion rampant, to the tournament in Spain. Manager Jock Stein embraced Player’s determinat­ion and, though he would dearly have loved to bring home the trophy, toured schools exhorting youngsters not to start smoking, telling them that was more important “than it is for us to win the World Cup!”

It was a PR coup but no fluke: Player had shrewdly tapped into the power of football to influence, particular­ly among the working class and jobless where smoking-related diseases were taking a fatal toll on lives. He also harnessed mass media initiative­s to get his messages across to the widest audience and, working alongside a talented team of medical and media specialist­s, their innovative campaigns began to make a positive difference to the health of the nation.

He went on to be director general of the Health Education Council, to continue his fight against the “enemies of health”, strive to reduce unavoidabl­e health inequaliti­es and uphold the socialist ideals and practices of the National Health Service, an institutio­n created while he was a young medical student.

David Player was born in Glasgow’s Queen’s Park, to John Player, a detective chief inspector, and Agnes. He was educated at Calder Street Primary and B ellahousto­n Academy where he excelled at football and cricket, later playing both sports for British Army teams during his National S er vice.

During his studies at Glasgow Medical School, where he qualified in 1950, he developed links with the Communist Party and later concluded, as the world tried to heal from the Second World War, that deep structural change was required.

After a spell as a junior doctor and national service in Hong Kong, where he was a captain with the Royal Army Medical Corps and learned Mandarin, he worked in accident and emergency at Glasgow Royal Infirmary. In the evenings he studied for extra qualificat­ions in medical specialism­s. By the mid-1950s, keen to enter general practice, he took a post in Cumbria serving mining villages where poverty was rife and poor working conditions left many workers suffering respirator­y illnesses. Frustrated by the health inequaliti­es he saw, he realised he wanted to effect change and move into preventati­ve medicine.

In 1962 he secured a position as Medical Officer of Health in Dumfries where he stayed for nine years, starting preventati­ve health programmes including Well Woman Clinics and antipovert­y initiative­s. He was also active in the Labour Party and in the movement against the Vietnam War. His commitment to public health echoed the ethos of Sir John Brothersto­n, then Chief Medical Officer for Scotland, and in 1971 Player was given the opportunit­y to work for health education countrywid­e. Initially he was director of Prison Psychiatry before being made director of the Scottish Health Education Unit. The World Cup initiative came during the latter stages of his tenure and shortly after that memorable football outing he was appointed director General of the London-based Health Education Council (HEC), responsibl­e for health education and promotion in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

S p i r i t e d , c o u r a g e o u s a n d with a great Glasgow sense of humour, he ruffled feathers in Whitehall with his high-profile approach and vehement opposition to the tobacco industry but he also achieved success, notably reducing the salt content in bread and pioneering the Great British Fun Run. Then, when the HEC was suddenly abolished – without his prior knowledge – and replaced by the Health Education Authority in 1987, his job disappeare­d.

His swansong turned out to be his previously commission­ed r e p o r t , T h e He a l t h Div i d e , w h i c h d e m o n s t r a t e d t h a t health inequaliti­es persisted in society, disproport­ionately affecting the poorest. It was said to be “political dynamite” and a press briefing was cancelled an hour ahead of its launch, just a week before the HEC’S demise. A panel of experts due to discuss it decided to go ahead anyway but Player was forbidden to attend and the debacle was a PR disaster for the Thatcher Government. Instead of being buried, it made headline news.

Player was then headhunted as director of public health for South Birmingham Health Authorit y, became active in the Public Health Alliance and joined Consultant­s for the NHS, serving on their executive.

After retiring at 64, he did a degree i n S c o t t i s h Hi s t o - r y and English Literature at St Andrews and returned to Edinburgh where he was a fervent supporter of the Homeless World Cup, attending a H o l y r o o d f u n c t i o n f o r t h e event when it came to the Scottish capital. He said he would always remember the sight of players gathered in the Scottish Parliament for the reception in their honour and wrote: “That is what public health should be all about – empowermen­t, mutual respect and the dignity of a wellearned place in a fair and socially just society.”

Predecease­d by his wife Anne in 2006, he is survived by sons John and Stewart, four grandchild­ren and his sister Bunty.

 ??  ?? 0 David Player was passionate about addressing health inequaliti­es across the nation
0 David Player was passionate about addressing health inequaliti­es across the nation

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom