TV

Dean Howard Hu with portrait of Gerry FitzGerald

Origin story: how the Dalla Lana School of Public Health began

Fighting germs, manufacturing vaccines and distributing them for free

One hundred years ago, in a city rife with infectious disease, Dr. John Gerald (“Gerry”) FitzGerald opened a small laboratory in the basement of TV’s Medical Building.

The lab succeeded in controlling and even eradicating deadly infectious diseases such as diphtheria and smallpox – and it planted an early seed for Canada’s publicly-funded health care system.

May 1, 2014 marks the centenary of the founding of that lab: the University of Toronto Antitoxin Laboratory, predecessor of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health. In his award-winning book, What Disturbs Our Blood, James FitzGerald, the grandson of “Canada’s public health visionary,” traces the full story.

“My grandfather and his colleagues,” he writes, “transformed the field of public health from an isolated grassroots movement into a modern, specialized, state-run bureaucracy, stretching like a giant safety net from the Atlantic to Pacific Oceans.”

Gerry FitzGerald’s fascination with the emerging germ theory of disease — the concept that conditions are caused by micro-organisms or pathogens that infect a host — propelled him into medical school at age 16 in 1899. After studying at elite international medical institutions including Harvard, Berkeley and the Pasteur Institute, FitzGerald returned home in 1913 to pitch a radical idea to the University of Toronto Board of Governors: he would manufacture vaccines and antitoxins for free distribution to all Canadians as a public service.

“He had the values of a scholar, the drive of an entrepreneur and a highly developed social conscience,” said James FitzGerald.

With the epochal discovery of insulin by Banting and Best at TV in 1922, the young lab — now renamed the Connaught Laboratories — drew international attention and fresh philanthropic support. The Rockefeller Foundation donated $1.2-million (equivalent to roughly $30-million today) to establish the University of Toronto School of Hygiene, serving as the academic arm of the labs.

Opening on College Street in 1927, it was only the third school of hygiene in North America at the time, alongside Johns Hopkins and Harvard.

FitzGerald’s vision for the Connaught Labs and the School of Hygiene was three-pronged: the preparation of a host of low-cost, high quality preventative medicines for free national distribution through government departments of health; a research arm to develop new products to meet the constant threat of infectious diseases; and undergraduate and graduate education to pass on the torch of knowledge to future generations of public health workers.

By the mid-1930s, the School was a world leader in sanitation science, nutrition and vaccine development.  Not only did all provinces distribute Connaught products, but the lab built a thriving export market in countries as distant as New Zealand, China and the Caribbean.

As the first commercial drug firm operated by an academic institution, the Connaught Laboratories helped establish Canada as number one in the world in preventative medicine and public health. By 1940, the year of FitzGerald’s death, Hamilton and Toronto were declared the first cities in the world to be diphtheria-free. FitzGerald truly delivered on his vision of health care “within reach of everyone.”

Over the ensuing decades, the Connaught Labs and School of Hygiene added to its list of global achievements, including the ongoing mass production and world-wide distribution of insulin; the production of penicillin during World War II; the Jonas Salk polio vaccine in the 1950s and the invention of multivalent vaccines; and spearheading the conquest of smallpox in the 1970s.

The 1970s signalled change on many fronts. When communicable diseases seemed vanquished by vaccines and antibiotics, the Connaught Laboratories spun off into private industry in 1972, and TV transitioned the School of Hygiene into a community health department in the Faculty of Medicine. The Faculty of Medicine integration helped to ensure that all medical students received public health education and provided a framework for community health centers and advocacy for health and social reform.

“In many ways, the public health challenges faced by FitzGerald’s generation are not much different than those we face today,” observes Howard Hu, dean of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

“Our world is crowded, diverse, aging, urbanized, polluted, hot, thirsty, hungry and debt-ridden.  As William Foege, former director of the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention, put it, health in the 20th century can be summed up in four words: spectacular progress, spectacular inequities,” said Hu.

The SARS crisis in 2003 led to a rebirth of public health academics in Canada. Endowed by the Dalla Lana family with an unprecedented $20 million gift, the Dalla Lana School of Public Health was established in 2008. Today, the School has more than 300 outstanding faculty members, 450 students and partnerships with institutions throughout Toronto.

“I feel humbled to carry the touch lit by Gerry FitzGerald. His ‘within reach of everyone’ mantra resonates deeply with me,” said Hu.

“I am proud to lead a new generation of public health, health policy and population health researchers and academics who are improving health in Toronto, Ontario, and globally.”

For more information about the roots of the Connaught Laboratories,  .

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief