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John Henry (toxicologist)



John Anthony Henry
BornMarch 11 1939(1939-03-11)
Greenwich
DiedMay 8 2007 (aged 68)
NationalityBritish
FieldToxicology
Religious stanceRoman Catholic - Opus Dei

Professor John Anthony Henry (1939-03-11 Greenwich, England – 2007-05-08) was a professor specializing in toxicology in the Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington. He conducted research on the health effects of cannabis, cocaine and other recreational drugs.

Contents

Family and Childhood

Professor Henry was born in Greenwich on March 11 1939, and was the eldest of four surviving children. His father, Irish Doctor John Aloysius Henry, was a general practitioner and was the team doctor for Millwall Football Club, which gave the young John a lifelong interest in English Football.

Education

Henry was educated first at St. Joseph's Academy, Blackheath, run by the De Salle brothers. He attended Medical School at King's College London and joined Opus Dei as a twenty-year old medical student, there as a "numerary", a celibate member. Throughout the rest of his life, he attended mass daily and set aside two periods a day for prayer and meditation.

Illness, involvement with St. Josemaria, and recovery

In 1969, while vacationing in Italy, Henry developed a throat infection which was inadequately treated and caused kidney failure. His doctors thought it unlikely that he could survive long on dialysis and he retired from medicine for five years. During this period, he became director of Netherhall House, a student hall in Hampstead where he was the director from 1967 until 1970

St. Josemaria Escriva let it be known that he was praying that Henry would find a matching kidney and Henry recovered due to a successful transplant in 1976. Henry always believed that his kidney and his recovery came about through Escriva's intercession.

Return to medicine & media appearances

Henry then returned to his career in medicine as a registrar at Guy's Hospital, where he showed great compassion for his patients. In 1982 he was appointed consultant to the National Poisons Unit at Guy's, where he was successful in saving many lives, especially those of children who had ingested poisonous household products. He carried out research in toxicology to discover how those poisons worked and how to counteract them.

Henry was able to explain medical matters in layman terms and was well versed in all aspects of drugs and poisons.

He took a special interest in the damage done to young people's lives by illegal drugs. He insisted that cannabis was much more devastating than simple tobacco, taking away the user's free-will, dignity and destroying personalities and damaging society.

He also explained how ecstasy and amphetamines could cause death by hyperpyrexia and dehydration. He was among the first to warn the public that the dangers of ecstasy were underestimated and he briefly had the nickname "Mr E". He was called as an expert witness for the inquest into the death of Leah Betts, who died after taking an ecstasy tablet at her 18th birthday party and whose case became a cause célébre.

Death

In April 2007, Henry's transplated kidney failed, and he went to hospital to have it removed. He appeared to be recovering well, but died of internal hemorrhaging.

Toxicology

During the 2004 Ukrainian elections, he noted that the opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko could have been poisoned using dioxins.

He was the clinical toxicologist who dealt with the poisoning case of Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko (at University College Hospital) in November 2006. Initially he suggested poisoning from the metal thallium, although it later turned out that the toxin was polonium-210.

Television

Professor Henry appeared numerous times on television, including Sky One's documentary entitled Poisoned which primarily concentrated on the case of Ukrainian President, Victor Yuschenko. On one occasion Professor Henry even appeared on the Ali G show, having been told it was an educational program, and talked about the dangers of hard drugs, brushing aside the jokes made at his expense.. He last featured on an episode of Horizon, 'A Perfect Murder', in which he talked about the poisonings of Litvinenko and Yuschenko. The episode aired at 21:00 on the 8 May 2007 - the same day that he died - and the programme makers acknowledged his passing at the end of the credits.

References

  • Opus Dei
  • The Times:Obituary - May 14 2007
  • The Daily Telegraph:Obituary - May 12 2007
  • The Guardian:Litvinenko poisoning:the main players - November 24 2006]
  • Netherhall House
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "John_Henry_(toxicologist)". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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