Hamish Barber | |
Birth Name: | James Hill Barber |
Birth Date: | 28 June 1933 |
Birth Place: | Dunfermline, Scotland |
Nationality: | Scottish |
Education: | University of Edinburgh |
Years Active: | 1957–1993 |
Known For: | first professor of General Practice at the University of Glasgow |
Profession: | doctor |
Field: | General Practitioner |
James Hill "Hamish" Barber (28 May 1933 – 26 August 2007) was a doctor and medical academic. He was the first professor of general practice at the University of Glasgow and wrote the first comprehensive textbook in this field.
Barber was born on 28 May 1933 in Dunfermline, Scotland.[1]
Barber qualified from the University of Edinburgh in 1957. He gained a MD in 1966 with a thesis entitled A Study of Asymptomatic Bacteriuria in General Practice.[2]
In 1972 he was appointed as senior lecturer in the organisation of medical care at the University of Glasgow.[3] In 1974 he became the first professor of General Practice at the University.[4] Computer-assisted learning was introduced during his tenure.[5]
Together with Andrew Boddy, he wrote The Textbook of General Practice Medicine which was published in 1975. At just over 350 pages it was the first comprehensive textbook of this specialty.[6]
He retired in 1993.
He made model boats and wrote a book on the topic that was published in 2005: Scottish fishing vessels of the nineteenth century, a guide to building scale model boats.[7]
After a long illness, he died on 26 August 2007.[8]