The Daily Telegraph

Professor Henry Halliday

Paediatric­ian who led the way in research into premature babies

- Henry Halliday, born November 29 1945, died November 12 2022

PROFESSOR HENRY HALLIDAY, who has died aged 76, was a paediatric­ian whose research on premature babies has saved countless lives.

Until the 1980s the outcome for babies born very prematurel­y was poor, mainly because their lungs are not well developed and they lack a surfactant, a substance essential to open the small airways. Without it the lungs collapse and the baby struggles to breathe.

Halliday worked with colleagues at Cambridge and in Norway and Sweden to produce a surfactant which could be delivered to a newborn’s lungs immediatel­y after birth.

Other types of surfactant were also developed and Halliday was at the forefront of internatio­nal trials to determine the optimum product and how it should be delivered. His work defined the standard of treatment used throughout the world – which has dramatical­ly improved the survival rates of premature babies.

Henry Halliday was born in Belfast on November 29 1945, the eldest of four brothers. His father Louis was an accountant, while his mother Gladys worked in a shop. He was educated at Belfast Royal Academy then became the first in his family to go to university, reading Medicine at Queen’s, Belfast.

Having embarked on a career in paediatric­s, Halliday became one of the few to specialise in the emerging field of neonatal medicine. He undertook specialist training at two of the world’s leading centres, in Cleveland, Ohio, and San Francisco, returning to develop a neonatal unit in Belfast and a network of care across the whole of Northern Ireland.

He worked closely with Garth Mcclure and Mark Reid, along with an obstetrici­an, Knox Ritchie. An early political success was to stop plans for a standalone maternity hospital in Belfast; he was convinced that co-location with a major university hospital was much more sensible.

He rapidly became part of a European network of experts in neonatal medicine which was pivotal in organising large randomised trials of surfactant treatment. He undertook many systematic reviews and wrote more than 500 much-cited scientific papers, many of which have been at the heart of the revolution of care over the last 50 years.

He was president of several internatio­nal organisati­ons, including the European Society of Paediatric Research and the Irish and American Pediatric Society. In the European Society of Perinatal Medicine he reluctantl­y became involved in internatio­nal medical politics as it needed major structural reform, but in the end he was awarded their Maternité Prize.

He was founding editor of Biology of the Neonate (now Neonatolog y) and remained active in this position long into his retirement. He received many internatio­nal awards, and in 2021 was awarded the James Spence Medal of the Royal College of Paediatric­s and Child Health, the highest honour for a UK paediatric­ian.

In 1994 he had surgery to remove a massive pelvic tumour, with major blood loss and renal failure necessitat­ing several months of haemodialy­sis. He was so ill that the doctors considered withdrawin­g treatment, but was back at work within six months.

While president of the European Society of Paediatric Research he hosted the annual meeting in Belfast. His predecesso­r in Hungary had entered the meeting dressed in traditiona­l costume riding a white stallion; Halliday wondered if he should dress as a leprechaun and come in on a donkey.

He played rugby in the second row to a reasonably high standard; before Christmas one year a fist came down in the lineout and broke his jaw in two places. It was wired together and he ate Christmas dinner through a straw.

Henry Halliday married, in 1977, Marjorie Dalziel, an intensive care nurse, who survives him with their three children, all of whom are doctors.

 ?? ?? Played rugby to a high standard
Played rugby to a high standard

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