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  1. On 21 June 1924, Chisholm married Grace McLean Ryrie. They had two children, Catherine Anne and Brock Ryrie. [2] [6] On 4 February 1971, Chisholm died age 74 in Veterans' Hospital, Victoria, British Columbia, after a series of strokes. [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

    • Early Life
    • First World War Service
    • Education and Early Career
    • Second World War Service
    • Pulhems System of Medical Grading
    • Director General of Medical Services
    • Health Administrator and Controversial Public Figure
    • Director-General of The World Health Organization
    • Later Life and Advocacy
    • Significance

    Brock Chisholm was the third of six children born to Frank and Lizzie Chisholm. Frank delivered coal and sold patentmedicines. Lizzie, who suffered from a debilitating illness, struggled to care for Brock and his siblings. His older sister, Faith, helped raise the younger children. The family had trouble making ends meet on Frank’s modest earnings....

    Brock Chisholm served in the trenches in France and rose through the army’s lower ranks. By January 1917, when he was made a lieutenant in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, he had already been a cook, sniper, machine-gunner and scout. That August, he fought in the Battle for Hill 70 and earned the Military Cross for courage. His leadership of his p...

    Since he’d been a child, Brock Chisholm had wanted to become a doctor. He enrolled in medicine at the University of Toronto in 1919 and graduated in 1924. That same year, he married Grace Ryrie, whom he had met 10 years earlier. The newlyweds spent a year in London, England, where Brock completed postgraduate work. They returned in 1925 and set up ...

    Brock Chisholm remained active in the Canadian military in the years after the First World War. He rose to senior ranks in the militia (i.e., the reserve infantry forces) while pursuing his medical career. From 1928 to 1931 he was lieutenant colonel of The Halton Rifles and from 1931 to 1932 he was lieutenant colonel of The Lorne Rifles. In the lat...

    In 1941, Chisholm became the army’s director of personnel selection. He developed a new system for evaluating recruits that weighted aspects of mental healthon the same scale as physical health. Chisholm’s template for assessing recruits was called PULHEMS (Physique, Upper Limbs, Lower Limbs, Hearing, Eyesight, Mentality, Stability). In matching in...

    In 1942, Chisholm was promoted to director general of medical services for the Canadian Army. He expanded the processes for screening new recruits by having psychiatric social workers gather information on candidates that might point to a nervous or mental disability. He made the antibiotic drug penicillin widely available to the army while it was ...

    In November 1944, Brock Chisholm was appointed federal deputy minister of health in the Liberal government of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. He played a central role in early attempts to negotiate the Green Book proposals (plans for a national health-insurance system) with the provinces (see also: Health Policy; Social Security; Welfar...

    Brock Chisholm did resign as deputy minister of health in July 1946, but not from political pressure. He was appointed executive secretary of a commission that the United Nationshad tasked with establishing the World Health Organization (WHO). In addition to coming up with the organization’s name, Chisholm contributed his definition of health to it...

    Upon their return to Canada, Brock and Grace Chisholm built a house near the village of Sooke on Vancouver Island. In the mid-1950s, Brock held positions as a special lecturer at several universities. Until the late 1960s, the couple travelled half the year for his many speaking engagements. Chisholm unsuccessfully ran as a Conservative candidate f...

    In his military career, Brock Chisholm was a decorated soldier who became an effective, bold and forward-thinking administrator. He introduced mental health as a crucial factor in the selection, placement and management of armypersonnel. His PULHEMS system of medical grading was not only successful in Canada, but also influenced other Western natio...

  2. Jul 2, 2020 · Brock Chisholm visited Thinkers Lodge on July 2, 2017, 60 years after his great uncle, also named Dr. Brock Chisholm, participated in the 1957 Pugwash Conference. Dr. Chisholm also attended he was the surgeon general to the Royal Canadian Army, and he became the first director of the world health organization.

  3. On 21 June 1924, Chisholm married Grace McLean Ryrie. They had two children, Catherine Anne and Brock Ryrie. [2] [6] On 4 February 1971, Chisholm died age 74 in Veterans' Hospital, Victoria, British Columbia, after a series of strokes. [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] Chisholm's honors and awards include: 1945: Medal of the Pasteur Institute [4]

  4. Brock Chisholm was married to Grace McLean Ryrie on June 21, 1924, and they had two children, Catherine Anne and Brock Ryrie. Dr. Chisholm died on February 4, 1971, in Veterans’ Hospital, Victoria, Ontario.

    • Emily Mace
  5. On May 26th, 1915, at 18 years of age, Chisholm joined the Canadian Expeditionary Force, serving in the 15th Battalion as a cook, sniper, machine gunner, and scout. He rose to the rank of Captain, was injured once - a gunshot wound to the left thigh - and returned home in 1919.

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  7. Oct 2, 2023 · On 21 June 1924, Chisholm married Grace McLean Ryrie. They had two children, Catherine Anne and Brock Ryrie. In 1946, Chisholm became executive secretary of the Interim Commission of WHO, based in Geneva. On 4 February 1971, Chisholm died age 74 in Veterans' Hospital, Victoria, British Columbia, after a series of strokes. Sources

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