Before studying medicine, her favourite subject had been Greek poetry and she fondly remembered the enthusiasm of her tutor at Ormond College.
“In the strength of the breeze he himself created, his University gown used to float behind him as he strode to and fro before us, exclaiming ecstatically: ‘Shakespeare could not have done better; he could not have done better’,’’ she wrote.
Mary began her medical career at the newly-founded Clinical School at St Vincent’s Hospital in 1910. However, at the time, no medical residency positions were available for women in Melbourne so she moved to New Zealand, where she was the first woman to be granted a medical residency.
When Mary returned to Victoria, she focussed on improving the health of underprivileged women and children and founded the Catholic Women’s Social Guild. She supported this work herself through her appointments at St Vincent’s Hospital, the Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital and her private practice. Long before bulk billing she was treating the unemployed and impoverished free of charge.
But it was her work in global health which is perhaps most inspiring and is one of the key aspects of her life which is being explored as part of her cause for canonisation.
After reading about the appalling death rate among babies in India Mary responded by becoming a medical missionary with the congregation of the Society of Jesus Mary Joseph as a nun to work in Guntur, in India’s rural southeast. She would stay working in India until her death in 1957.
One of the first hurdles Mary faced was that neither priests nor nuns were permitted to practise medicine at that time. Fortunately, Pope Benedict XV granted special permission for Mary to practise medicine, making her the world’s first nun-doctor missionary.
Ahead of her time
Mary’s approach to global health was ahead of her time and was more consistent with a contemporary health-development paradigm. She was what we today would call a systems thinker, in that she developed processes and structures to promote efficient and sustainable healthcare delivery to the poor.
For example, perhaps inspired by the sheer size of the task in improving health care for India’s burgeoning and needy population, she pioneered institutions to educate Indian doctors, nurses, midwives and pharmacists. She was instrumental in establishing St John’s Bangalore, one of the most respected medical colleges in India, which today trains thousands of doctors, nurses and allied health professionals who work across India.
One of Mary’s most important contributions to developing a more efficient and effective system was her work in establishing networks and collaborations. Those of us in global health now take this for granted in healthcare planning in low and middle-income settings.
In 1942 she established the Catholic Hospital Association of India (CHAI), which stands as perhaps her most enduring and impacting legacy. CHAI was created to promote the health of the marginalised across India. It has now become the world’s largest health network, boasting 3518 member institutions, including 2263 health centres, 417 secondary care hospitals, 183 tertiary care hospitals, 200 social service societies, five medical colleges and 120 nursing schools. There are now over a thousand sister-doctors across CHAI following in Mary’s footsteps.
While it is up to the Catholic Church to judge whether Mary can be credited with a proven miracle, I would think bringing and keeping together so many partners must in itself be miraculous.
Mary was also deeply respectful of India, its people and their systems, and this set her apart from the prevailing attitudes demonstrated by many of her Western contemporaries. She aimed to build on existing systems and approaches to health rather than to merely replace them.
In recognising Mary’s tremendous contributions to health, St Vincent’s Health Australia and the Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences at the University of Melbourne have established the Sr Dr Mary Glowrey Scholars Program to support health professionals from CHAI to gain training and skills in Melbourne. CHAI director Rev Dr Father Mathew Abraham is currently in Melbourne to inaugurate the new program.
Whether or not you are Catholic (and I am not) Mary was a Victorian woman of whom all Victorians can be immensely proud. We can learn from her passion and approach to global health. She should be an inspiration to many of us who want to use our skills to make a true and lasting difference in this world.
Mary was recognised by the Catholic Church as a “Servant of God” in 2013, the first of four official approvals towards sainthood.
The author gratefully acknowledges the assistance in writing this article of Robyn Fahy of the Catholic Women’s League of Victoria & Wagga Wagga.
This article was first published on Pursuit. Read the original article.
Top Comments
She sounds like a great person who should be more well known, but why do we have to now make up some phoney "miracles", it tarnishes her legacy in my opinion.
I doubt anything could tarnish the legacy of this amazing woman.
That's untrue Craig. All miracles in relation to sainthood in the Catholic Church are rigorously investigated by scientists & doctors etc outside the church and have to be genuinely unexplainable. Perhaps you should research it. As a practicing Catholic woman, I can't wait to be able to refer to Sister Doctor Mary Glowry as 'St Sr Dr', the only one I am aware of to be honest 😆
I am a Catholic, and even I don't believe that. Most of the 'miracles' are trumped up and easily explained in non-miracle terms.
Well, I guess I would dispute how Catholic you are if that's what you believe. Anyway, not here to argue, just happy to celebrate the possibility of a second Australian Saint, and such an amazing one at that.