Lifetime Achievement Award for Pioneering Diabetes Doctor
A former Stirling Royal Infirmary doctor who co-invented the world’s first insulin pen has received a Pride of Britain Lifetime Achievement Award.
In the late 1970s, Dr Sheila Reith, having come off the night sleeper from Glasgow, was giving her daughter Fiona her insulin injection in the ladies’ toilet at Euston Station when she came up with the idea of a pen-like device which would take insulin cartridges to make life easier for people with diabetes.
Sheila, now 86, says: “My daughter Fiona was the real inspiration. She was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes when she was just four, and the treatment was so primitive. I remember thinking to myself, we can do better than this.”
Sheila then became a consultant physician at Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital and discussed her idea with her colleague Dr John Ireland. They decided to pursue the project by recruiting Dr John Paton, a bioengineer, to their team. Initially they struggled to get insulin manufacturers interested, but despite this, with Diabetes UK’s support and the invaluable help of nurses, doctors and most, importantly, patients, they trialled their prototype which led to the launch of the world’s first commercial insulin pen – Penject – in 1983.
As well as her ground-breaking invention, after moving to Stirling Royal Infirmary, Sheila further devoted her career to improving diabetes care, working with local GPs to develop a computer database of patients with diabetes which enabled more efficient care and follow-up. She also developed a diabetes education centre which promoted multidisciplinary care for people with diabetes, including a dedicated diabetes specialist nurse alongside dieticians, chiropodists and a clinical psychologist.
Dr Elizabeth Robertson, Diabetes UK’s Director of Research, said: “ Dr Reith’s idea, and her determination to bring the insulin pen to life, changed the face of insulin therapy and diabetes care forever, benefiting too many people to count. “Anyone who is lucky enough to meet Dr Reith cannot but be impressed by her generosity of spirit and humility for her part in this tremendous innovation.”
Sheila adds: “I’m amazed that anyone put me forward for a Pride of Britain award, and deeply humbled to have won. However, none of the advances I was part of would have been possible without teamwork, and so I really feel I am accepting this award on behalf of many others. People with diabetes face challenges every day. It’s important that things continue to be made better and easier for them through further advances in research and care.”
You can find out more on the Pride of Britain Awards website and Diabetes UK.