Carecast also came in a regionalized version currently used at the University College Hospital in London.
After the war, he studied medicine at University College Hospital, where he met his future wife, Patricia (died 2002), with whom he had two children.
After studying History at Oxford University, and a stint teaching History at his old school, he began Medical training at University College Hospital in 1924 and qualified in 1930.
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He later worked at University College Hospital, King George Hospital, Ilford and in 1977 he became consultant psychotherapist at Runwell, Rochford and Basildon Hospitals.
He graduated from Clare College, Cambridge in both Natural and Moral Sciences and trained in Medicine at University College Hospital and at Duke University School of Medicine, North Carolina.
In the 1980s he became interested in ethics and law applied to medicine and at University College and The Middlesex Hospitals joint medical school he organised and jointly taught on a part-time basis on the subject.
In 1961, he was granted a fellowship by the International Atomic Energy Agency for a year of further training at University College Hospital in London on the medical application of isotopes.
In 1955, he was appointed trauma and orthopaedic surgeon at the new University College Hospital in Ibadan, Nigeria.