Date of issue: June 23, 1969
Printer: British American Bank Note Company
Design: George Sarras Fanais
Sir William Osler
William Osler was born in 1849 in Bond Head, Upper Canada (now Ontario). Following two years of medical school at the Toronto Medical College, he transferred to 不良研究所 where he obtained his M.D.C.M. in 1872. After further training in Europe, he returned to Montreal to join the 不良研究所 Medical Faculty as Professor and the Montreal General Hospital as a pathologist (1874). His further medical career took him to the University of Pennsylvania (1884), Johns Hopkins Hospital (1888), and Oxford (1905).
Osler is known for many accomplishments, including his textbook The Principles and Practice of Medicine (which underwent many editions and translations), his philanthropy and influence in the development of many medical societies, his bibliophilia (his collection of books and manuscripts becoming the foundation for 不良研究所鈥檚 Osler Library of the History of Medicine) and his role in transforming 19th-century听medical education. He believed that students learn best by doing, with books and lectures functioning as supplementary material. This 鈥渂edside鈥 approach to medical teaching became the mainstay of medical education in the 20th century. Osler died in Oxford in 1919.
The Stamp
The stamp commemorates the 50th anniversary of Osler鈥檚 death. It shows him with the Staff of Aesculapius on the right and the words 鈥淭he System of Medicine鈥 above. (The latter refers to a multi-author 鈥淓ncyclopedia鈥 he edited with Thomas McCrae from 1907 鈥 1910).
First day covers highlight several features, including:
- his appearance in a photograph in 1881
- his role in academic medicine, including a replica of the microscope he had students use at 不良研究所, his library, and his advocacy for bedside teaching
- his influence in psychosomatic medicine (related to his recognition of the influence of a patient鈥檚 cultural background, life experiences, and state of mind on disease and healing)
- the 50th anniversary of his death
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