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William Gordon Lennox (1884–1960)[1][2] was an American neurologist and epileptologist who was a pioneer in the use of electroencephalography (EEG) for the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy.
Lennox first became interested in epilepsy when working as medical missionary in China.[3] At the Harvard Medical School, he worked alongside and published many papers with Stanley Cobb and Erna and Frederic Gibbs. He was jointly awarded (with Frederic Gibbs) the Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research in 1951. He wrote, with his daughter Margaret, "Epilepsy and Related Disorders"[4].
In 1937, Lennox described the situation regarding the medical treatment of epilepsy at the time:
From 1935 to 1949 Lennox was president and from 1949 to 1953 honorary president of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE). From 1941 to 1948 he was - together with Hans Iacob Schou - co-editor, from 1948 to 1950 and again 1952 single editor of the journal Epilepsia of the ILAE. From 1936 to 1937 he served as first president of the American League Against Epilepsy, which later became the American Epilepsy Society (AES).
In 1951 he described a special epilepsy syndrome[6], lateron named after him and the french neurologist and epileptologsit Henri Gastaut Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
Lennox was also involved with the eugenics movement. He gave a speech in 1938 to Harvard's Phi Beta Kappa, recommending euthanasia for "the congenitally mindless and for the incurable sick who wish to die".[7] In the same year, he wrote "The principle of limiting certain races through limitation of off-spring might be applied internationally as well as intranationally."[8] In 1943, Lennox joined the advisory council of the Euthanasia Society of America (later known as Partnership for Caring). In 1950, he wrote an article entitled "The Moral Issue", calling for the mercy killing of "children with undeveloped or misformed brains" as a way of opening up space in "our hopelessly clogged institutions."[9]
He continued working into his 70s, only retiring from Harvard in 1958. He died two years later.
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