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Dr Winston Ince was one of the early
local innovators in the field of cardiology. During his
illustrious career, he introduced echocardiography[1]
to the Port-of-Spain General Hospital and secured free
open-heart surgery for children. He has written and
published several papers, in regional and international
journals, in areas such as cardiology and hypertension.
Winston Edghill Ince was born on 2nd
December, 1930 in Tunapuna, Trinidad. He started his
education in 1935 under the tutorage of Mr Prince Edgar
Ferdinand, Headmaster of the La Brea R.C. School. Mr
Ferdinand mentored him, giving him personal lessons
free of charge, helping to ensure that Ince won an
exhibition to St. Mary’s College in 1941. The young
student stayed at his grandmother’s home in Curepe to
facilitate his studies and excelled, receiving an
Island Scholarship in Science and the Dr Stollmeyer
Medal for Science in 1948.
Ince then left for the United
Kingdom in 1949 to study at the University of
Cambridge. In 1952, he obtained First Class Honours in
the Preliminary to the Natural Science Tripos and won a
College Exhibition and the Tripos Prize. In 1953, he
obtained a Bachelor of Arts (BA) Natural Science Tripos
with First Class Honours and was again awarded the
Tripos Prize, along with the title, Scholar of Sidney
Sussex College. He entered medical school at University
College Hospital, London and graduated with a Bachelor
of Medicine and Surgery (MBBChir) from the University
of Cambridge in 1956.
He obtained postgraduate diplomas of
Membership of the Royal College of Physicians (MRCP),
Edinburgh specialising in cardiology in 1960 and the
MRCP, London in 1961. He was subsequently elected to
the Fellowship of both Royal Colleges.
In 1962, Ince returned to Trinidad
and served as Senior Registrar at the Port-of-Spain
General Hospital. He went back to London to become a
clinical assistant in the Department of Cardiology at
the University College Hospital in 1966, and returned
to the General Hospital in 1967 as Consultant Physician
in Cardiology and Internal Medicine.
For more than 50 years, Ince’s
career was focused on clinical medicine, clinical
cardiology and teaching medical students in the UWI
Eastern Caribbean Medical Scheme. He managed and
developed the Paediatric and Adult Cardiology Services
for over 25 years and retired from the General Hospital
in 1990 as Medical Chief of Staff. He played a
significant role in the introduction of
echocardiography, which is important in the diagnosis
of heart disease.
Despite his retirement, Ince as
Honorary Consultant Physician to the hospital,
continues to be involved in the training of
echocardiographic technicians. The first batch
graduated in 2004. He is currently the Chief Medical
Officer for an insurance company and also has a private
consulting practice in cardiology.
Dr Ince is the recipient of the
Chaconia Medal (Gold) in 1989, the Trinidad and Tobago
Medical Association Scroll of Honour in 1990, and an
honour award from the Caribbean Cardiac Society in
1999.
He advises that young people with
scientific aspirations should “always aim at performing
to the best of their ability, work hard, read
extensively, and seek after truth, wherever it may be
found.”
1-The
use of ultrasound to generate images of the heart
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