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Professor George Norris Melville is
an individual with a staggering list of achievements.
During his professional life, he has been academician,
researcher, diplomat and administrator, but he is best
known in Trinidad and Tobago for formulating the
proposal that led to the establishment of the Faculty
of Medical Sciences of The University of the West
Indies (UWI) at Mount Hope. A prolific researcher,
Melville has published over 130 refereed scientific
papers and three books during his distinguished career.
Born in Roxborough, Tobago on 15th
December 1939, Melville was educated at Ebenezer
Methodist School and Bishop's High School, Tobago. He
enjoyed his schooldays, which he shared with his
close-knit family and multitude of friends. Melville's
natural ability in the sciences, coupled with the fact
that his parents both suffered with non-communicable
diseases, fuelled his desire to study medicine. It took
the loss of his job with the Federal Government,
however, to propel him to pursue higher studies in
Canada. At the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, he
obtained a Bachelor of Science (BSc) General in 1966,
followed by a Master of Science (MSc) in Physiology
from Dalhousie University in Halifax in 1968. After a
study year in Germany, he travelled to Jamaica to
lecture at the University of the West Indies, and
pursue his Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Physiology,
which he completed in 1972.
This became a turning point for
Melville, who decided to pursue medicine. In that same
year, he returned to Germany where he began his medical
degree and taught physiology at the University of Essen
(now Duisberg-Essen). He also worked at the Silicosis
Research Institute, the Herne Medical Centre and Ruhr
University. His research focused on the effect of
mucus-producing disease on lung function, and he
created a model to study the effect of irritants on the
respiratory system of animals. By 1977, Melville had
become a Doctor of Medicine (MD) (under the mentoring
of Dr Josef Iravani, now deceased), received two
substantial research grants and worked on over 40
publications since he first set off for Canada.
In 1978, Dr Melville returned to
Jamaica as Professor and Head of the Physiology
Department at UWI. He served as Associate Dean and Vice
Dean before being called to UWI in Trinidad and Tobago
in 1985. Between 1987 and 1988, he served as CARICOM
Health Advisor in Guyana and returned to Trinidad and
Tobago when the Government accepted his proposal for a
self-financing, full-programme medical school. The
Faculty of Medical Sciences, St. Augustine emerged in
1989.
After being Vice Dean from 1989 to
1993, Melville became Dean in 1993. His four-year term
saw the Faculty earning a large European Union grant to
study Health Reform in the Caribbean, and it soon rose
as both a sound financial entity and a research-capable
institution. During his tenure, the Faculty became an
international standard for problem-based learning
medical schools. Collaborations were initiated with
tertiary institutions in India and Malaysia in 1994, a
pharmacy programme was opened in 1995 and a clinical
training programme began in The Bahamas in 1997.
Professor Melville sat on the
Academic Board of UWI for 10 years and served as the
Chairman of the Trinidad and Tobago Vision 2020
Sub-Committee on Health. He is currently a member of
the North West Regional Health Authority Board and
Fellow of both the Caribbean Academy of Sciences and
the Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS).
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