Canadian physician
Gustave Gingras Crest A strand of maple erect Gules and in saltire a palm branch and a laurel branch proper all entwined by a serpent Vert. Shield Quarterly Vert and barry undy Argent and Azure two flaunches per fess counterchanged of the field over all a cross formy the finials alternating gringolee and floretty all Or. Motto Je Sers (I Serve)[ 1]
Gustave Gingras [pronunciation? ] [ 2] CC (January 18, 1918 – May 9, 1996) was a Canadian physician and founder of the Montreal Institute of Rehabilitation in 1949.
Born in Montreal , Quebec , he studied medicine at the Université de Montréal following the completion of his BA at College Bourget in Rigaud , Quebec . In 1942, he joined the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps and served overseas during World War II . There, he studied neurosurgery as an intern at the Canadian Neurosurgical and Plastic Surgery Hospital in Basingstoke, England. Upon his return to Canada, he was inspired by Wilder Penfield , a neurosurgeon in Montreal, to focus on helping paraplegic and quadriplegic veterans of the war. As an expert in rehabilitation of the disabled, he served as a consultant to the World Health Organization , the United Nations , the Canadian Red Cross and the Canadian International Development Agency . He was president of the Canadian Medical Association from 1972 to 1973. He was Chancellor of the University of Prince Edward Island from 1974 to 1982.
Honours
Books
Gustave Gingras: Combats pour la Survie. Paris: Robert Laffont / Opera mundi, 1975.
Gustave Gingras: Feet Was I to the Lame. Translated by Joan Chapman. London: Souvenir Press, 1977.
References
External links