IN the latest in our series hearing from the important people who keep the Friends of GRI Museum running we speak to volunteer Olive Burnside, who has a unique link to the history of the hospital. If you’d like to join Olive as a volunteer then we’d love to hear from you. Just send us an email to info@friendsofgri.org and we’ll get back to you!
Words: BETH OLIVER
Photos: FABRIZIO FELLA
ANYONE who has ever spent a bit of time at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary will have some connection to Joseph Lister – the man who discovered antisepsis and a figure of wide renown throughout the medical field. Yet you would be hard-pressed to find anyone with a stronger link to him than Olive Burnside, a retired English teacher who now volunteers at the Friends of GRI Museum.
“I’ve always been interested in Lister,” Olive said. “If I am in Kelvingrove Park I make sure to go past his statue and sort of say thank you. That’s because in 1987, right at the end of a twin pregnancy, I got very ill with a mystery illness, which the doctor couldn’t diagnose for a couple of days. I was really delirious and really very seriously ill. It was a bacteriologist working through the night who identified what was growing in my blood sample as Listeriosis.”
Listeriosis is a rare infection that can be particularly harmful to pregnant women and their unborn children. Once diagnosed it becomes a lot easier to treat, however it can still be very dangerous and lead to fatal consequences for both mother and baby. “It can cross the placenta, so all three of us – me and the twins – were in
mortal danger,” Olive reflected. “But once they had the diagnosis and knew which antibiotic to give me, they whacked in whatever it was and the infection was under control.” Thanks to the doctors identifying the listeriosis and successfully treating the infection, Olive and her twins were saved. This incredible story alone would give Olive a remarkable association to Lister but her story goes much deeper than that. “A few days later,” she continued, “I was visited in hospital by a descendant – a great, great nephew, maybe – of Sir Joseph Lister himself to say, ‘I’ve never met anybody who’s had the infection named after my ancestor’.”
Olive has never taken this whole experience for granted. In fact it has fueled her to learn more about the history of the GRI and help others to learn about it too. “One of the reasons I was drawn to the museum was because of the connection to Lister who did his great work on antisepsis in the Royal Infirmary,” she said. “It’s a really nice museum and it’s part of that whole kind of historic quarter of the city.”
Throughout her time at the museum, Olive has been able to engage with a whole range of people, sharing the stories of the GRI and the great Lister. “We get tourists from all over the world coming in here,” Olive explained. “They always enjoy it and they’re interested in it. We get hospital staff, current and retired, coming in too. So
that’s really nice. Often, current staff see what’s here, are reminded of the history of the hospital and then go away and get a student or two and haul them in and say, ‘look what you’re a part of’. So it’s great to be able to offer that. The other group are patients and their visitors. People who are able to get out of bed for a wee excursion. It’s nice for them to come and realise what they’re part of too.”
The GRI is a truly lovely museum, which finds a way to highlight the importance of the hospital and its history both on a global scale and on a more personal level through the dedication of its volunteers. If you ever find yourself in the mood to learn about the fascinating history of the hospital, be sure to pop along and hear all about what Olive and the other wonderful volunteers have to say. Who knows, you might even be lucky enough to bump into someone’s great great nephew.
If you’re interested in joining Olive as a volunteer then we’d love to hear from you. You can contribute as much or as little as your time allows. Just send us an email to info@friendsofgri.org and we’ll get back to you!