Andrew Almon Fletcher (8 March 1889,
Kingston, Ontario – 30 November 1964,
Toronto) was a Canadian physician and pioneering diabetologist, known as one of the five co-authors of the famous 1922 paper Pancreatic Extracts in the Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus.[1]
Biography
A. Almon Fletcher graduated in 1913 from the
University of Toronto with an
M.B. (qualifying him for the practice of medicine). From 1915 to 1918 he served overseas in the Canadian Army Medical Corps. After WW I, he became a staff member of the department of medicine of the University of Toronto and of the medical service of
Toronto General Hospital. He qualified
F.R.C.P.C. in 1930. He was an assistant professor in the department of medicine of the University of Toronto and a senior physician at Toronto General Hospital from 1922 to 1951 when he retired from Toronto General Hospital. In 1951 he was put in charge of the clinical investigation unit at Toronto's Sunnybrook Military Hospital,[2] which in 1973 became
Sunnybrook Medical Centre.
At Toronto General Hospital, in the diabetes ward under the direction of
Duncan Archibald Graham, the physicians A. Almon Fletcher and
Walter R. Campbell[3] were responsible for the treatment of
Leonard Thompson, a teenaged charity case with a severe case of
type 1 diabetes, who had been transferred on 2 December 1921 from Toronto's
Hospital for Sick Children.[4] Dr. Campbell persuaded Leonard Thompson's father to consent to the experimental test on his son of the pancreatic extract supplied by
Banting,
Best, and
Macleod. The historic injection of insulin took place on 11 January 1922.[3]
The spring of 1922 was a period of consolidation. Visitors came from all countries of the western world. Especially memorable were
Petren from Oslo,
Woodyatt from Chicago and
Wilder from
Mayo's—these men were largely instrumental in the development of the high-fat diets then in vogue—and
Elliott Joslin and
F. M. Allen, who were advocates of starvation and undernutrition. They made no effort to conceal their excitement and unbounded admiration. During this time further physiological papers appeared, describing the associated effects of insulin in addition to its influence on carbohydrate and fat metabolism. A method of pharmacological assay was devised and the unit defined.[5]
According to Dr. Fletcher in 1962:
Most of our patients went on to live normal, useful and happy lives. One writes me each Christmas; he now informs me tha he has reached the age when regretfully he must retire. Last Christmas, he sent me only a short note—"1922, remember."[6]
Fletcher, A. A. (1933). "Value of Occupational Therapy in Chronic Arthritis". Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy. 1: 20–23.
doi:
10.1177/000841743300100105.
S2CID76194572.
Hench, P. S.; Bauer, W.; Fletcher, A. A.; Ghrist, D.; Hall, F.; White, P. (1935). "The Present Status of the Problem of "Rheumatism"; A Review of Recent American and English Literature on "Rheumatism" and Arthritis". Annals of Internal Medicine. 8 (10): 1315.
doi:
10.7326/0003-4819-8-10-1315.
Kerr, R. B.; Best, C. H.; Campbell, W. R.; Fletcher, A. A. (1936).
"Protamine Insulin". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 34 (4): 400–401.
PMC1561605.
PMID20320225.
Volpé, Robert; Bruce-Robertson, Alan; Fletcher, A.Almon; Charles, W.Bruce (1956). "Essential cryoglobulinaemia". The American Journal of Medicine. 20 (4): 533–553.
doi:
10.1016/0002-9343(56)90137-1.
PMID13302232. 1956
Banting, F. G.; Best, C. H.; Collip, J. B.; Campbell, W. R.; Fletcher, A. A. (1956). "Pancreatic Extracts in the Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus". Diabetes. 5: 69–71.
doi:
10.2337/diab.5.1.69.
S2CID22547673. (reprint of March 1922 article)