Female nurse who played crucial role in IVF ignored on plaque - News Summed Up

Female nurse who played crucial role in IVF ignored on plaque


The name of a female nurse and embryologist who played a crucial role in developing the world’s first test-tube baby was excluded from a plaque honouring the pioneers of IVF despite objections from her colleagues, newly released letters reveal. Jean Purdy was one of three scientists whose groundbreaking work led to the birth of the first IVF baby, Louise Brown, in 1978. Yet her central role was largely forgotten in the rush to praise her colleagues, Prof Sir Robert Edwards and the surgeon Patrick Steptoe. The letters show that Purdy’s name was left off a plaque honouring her two colleagues, despite protests from Edwards. Edwards was awarded a Nobel prize in 2010 for the development of IVF and was knighted in 2011.


Source: The Guardian June 09, 2019 22:52 UTC



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