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Professor Jean Golding awarded OBE today

23 May 2012

Professor Jean Golding, founder of Children of the 90s, will receive an OBE from the Queen at Buckingham Palace today.

Professor Jean Golding, founder of Children of the 90s, will today receive an OBE from the Queen at Buckingham Palace. Speaking before the event, Professor Golding said:

‘This I see as an honour not just for me but for all the participants and members of staff that contributed to the many studies I have been involved with, especially those in Children of the 90s.’
When asked what her proudest moment was, she replied:
‘Parents stopping me in the street to tell me how proud they are to be in Children of the 90s.’
Professor Golding is looking forward to celebrating the day with her two brothers, who are travelling over from the US and Canada, and to a big family celebration afterwards.

Born on 22 September 1939 in Cornwall as Jean Bond, Professor Golding showed an early aptitude for biology, biochemistry and animal behaviour but a bout of polio at age 14 hampered her ability to spend long periods of time in a laboratory. She went on to read mathematics (‘a completely sedentary subject’) at St Anne’s College, Oxford. She was married briefly to Alan Fedrick and taught for a year before having two children in quick succession. By then in London, she obtained a job working in epidemiology (the study of health in a population). Having fallen in love with the topic she went on to do a PhD in Medical Statistics at University College London.

 Prior to establishing Children of the 90s, which has been charting the health and wellbeing of 14,500 mothers and their children in and around Bristol since the early 1990s, Professor Golding was involved, as Jean Fedrick, with the Oxford Record Linkage Study and the 1958 and 1970 national cohort studies. She also advised and helped design the National Greek Perinatal Survey and the Jamaican Birth Survey. In order to promote the science of the epidemiological study of pregnancy, childbirth and child development, she was instrumental in founding the international journal Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, which she continued as editor-in-chief for 25 years.

It was analyses of the large surveys in which she had been involved that highlighted for her the importance of the fine detail that was not available in major national studies and enabled her to design a very detailed protocol for the collection of data that is evident in the Children of the 90s study today.

On retirement as director of that study in 2006, she was commissioned by the World Health Organization and the National Institutes of Health to  develop a  guide to designing and running longitudinal studies to assess the influence of the environment on the health and development of children. The resulting publication has been widely praised.

 Her current activities include research into various environmental factors that affect a child’s development, including, in particular, aspects of the diet and pollutants such as lead and mercury; but she considers the most exciting of her studies is being undertaken with Professor Marcus Pembrey – this uses the information collected in Children of the 90s to look at the possible effects of the environment across generations.

She has published over 350 peer-reviewed papers and her other honours include Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences  and Emeritus Professor of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology at the University of Bristol. She was also runner up in the UK European Woman of the Year competition in 1998.

When not working, she enjoys good company, good food and a modicum of wine, but most of all the company of her two children and grandson.

Further information

To listen to an interview with Professor Golding, in which she reminisces about the early days of Children of the 90s and advocates a return to a more relaxed approach to pregnancy, follow this link.
Please contact Dara O'Hare for further information.
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