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Clair Gurney

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2007

Formerly Consultant Psychiatrist, St Nicholas Hospital, Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Clair Gurney was born in Whitley Bay in 1933, qualified in medicine at the University of Edinburgh and then returned to her roots in the north-east of England for her house appointments and for the rest of her career. She began in psychiatry as a junior hospital medical officer at St Nicholas Hospital in Newcastle-upon-Tyne until invited by Professor (later Sir) Martin Roth to join the research team he had started to assemble. The group was later funded by the Medical Research Council and Clair remained there as senior research associate for 16 years, a length of tenure which conveyed the high regard in which she was held by Professor Roth and his colleagues.

Clair was meticulous, thorough and reliable in her research projects. Her prime role was to obtain biographical, personality and clinical information from patients by personal interview using a structured pro forma and to record a detailed, descriptive history. The 1960s and 1970s were a time when junior research psychiatrists in Newcastle were given generous time and resources, as well as expert guidance and advice from Martin Roth and Roger Garside. In a study carried out with physicians, the data Clair collected demonstrated that items from psychiatric observation added substantially to the information from physical symptoms and signs, and laboratory tests, in the differentiation of thyrotoxic from euthyroid patients with psychiatric disorder among a group of patients with suspected hyperthyroidism. The foundation of a larger investigation into the differentiation of anxiety states and depressive disorders again rested on the quality of information painstakingly elicited by Clair in the course of structured interview. Her sensitivity and empathy ensured whole-hearted cooperation from patients, which was much appreciated by her colleagues who interviewed the same patients at follow-up 4 years later.

Clair also acquired a thorough understanding of the application of multivariate statistical analyses which were emerging at that time and which enable systematic examination of the presence of symptom clusters, patient groupings, diagnostic separations and predictive indices within the field of affective disorders. In a session in this field held at the World Psychiatric Association meeting in Mexico City, Clair charmed the audience by delivering her opening remarks in fluent Spanish.

After her lengthy period in research Clair returned to St Nicholas Hospital as associate specialist, remaining there until retirement in 1988, having repeatedly declined exhortations from her colleagues to apply for a permanent consultant post (although she eventually accepted an acting post), as she wished to have regular time to support her mother and sister.

Clair was a private person with a delightful sense of humour. Those who worked with her recall with affection her charm, modesty, thoughtfulness and generosity of spirit. In retirement she was able to devote more time to her life-long passion for birdwatching, often using the caravan she and her husband Ian, a senior lecturer in theoretical physics, enjoyed on the Northumberland coast. Her other great pleasure was playing the piano. It is poignant that failing strength in her fingers was the first symptom of motor neurone disease which Clair herself diagnosed, and which ran a rapidly progressive course to the time of her death in June 2006.

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