Born: 3 December 1906, Australia
Died: 25 July 1979
Country most active: Australia, Papua New Guinea
Also known as: NA
This biography has been shared from The Encyclopedia of Australian Science and Innovation, published by the Centre for Transformative Innovation, Swinburne University of Technology, under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Joan Refshauge was a medical practitioner and leader in the field of public health. After an early career in teaching, she qualified in medicine and worked as a Resident Medical Officer. On joining the Department of Public Health in Papua New Guinea she was required to restrict herself to maternal and child health. Refshauge was responsible for establishing programs that became the Queen Elizabeth II infant, child and maternal health service. She liaised with the missions, initiated the training of indigenous nurses and started school health services. Over 17 years Refshauge had established over 550 central and village clinics. By the time she resigned in 1967, the incidence to polio, tuberculosis, diphtheria and whooping cough had significantly diminished or been eliminated. Refshauge returned to Queensland, becoming Deputy Director of the Maternal and Child Health Service. In 1964 she was the first women, and only the sixth person in 30 years, to be awarded the Cilento Medal for outstanding work in tropical hygiene and native welfare.
Chronology
1931
Education – DipEd, University of Melbourne Teacher Training College
1931 – 1936
Career position – Demonstrator in Chemistry, University of Melbourne
1936
Career position – Lecturer in mathematics, Melbourne Technical College
1939
Education – MB BS, University of Melbourne
1943 – 1946
Career position – Served with Royal Australian Army Medical Corps
1947 – 1963
Career position – Medical practitioner, Department of Public Health, Papua New Guinea
1953
Education – Diploma of Public Health, University of Sydney
1964
Award – Cilento Medal, Australian Institute of Anatomy
1964
Award – Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services in Papua New Guinea
1964 – 1968
Career position – Medical practitioner, Maternal and Child Health Service, Queensland
1968 – 1978
Career position – Deputy Director, Maternal and Child Health Service, Queensland
1978
Life event – Retired
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