Background
He was the son of Sir Richard Wells, 1st Baronet, the brother of Sir Charles Wells, 2nd Baronet, and he gave his name to Wells" syndrome.
He was the son of Sir Richard Wells, 1st Baronet, the brother of Sir Charles Wells, 2nd Baronet, and he gave his name to Wells" syndrome.
Pembroke College.
Following a scholarship to Pembroke College, Cambridge University he went to Street Thomas’s Hospital to continue his clinical studies and qualified in 1939. He prematurely attempted and failed his Membership of the Royal College of Physicians (Membership of the Royal College of Physicians). After a spell at the Royal Army Medical Corps depot at Church Crookham as a Major he found himself in unfulfilling, general duties.
Volunteering to be a paratrooper he quickly found himself active in war theatres in Tunisia, Sicily, Greece and France during World World War World War II His medical experienced was broadened by the range of injuries he had to treat.
This post provided an insight into academic medicine but Wells did not enjoy lieutenant At this time dermatology was becoming a prestigious speciality and Wells gained a post working in Chicago University medical school with Stephen Rothman who was developing a dermatology department.
Wells decide to stay one extra year as he felt inspired by the stimulating environment. Rothman offered him a permanent post but Wells returned home after the second year.
Rothman knew WN Goldsmith in charge of dermatology at University College Hospital having worked and become friends with him in Wroclaw and with his recommendation Wells was interviewed and appointed senior registrar to WN Goldsmith.
The Institute of Dermatology was developing at Street John's Hospital and Wells was appointed as a senior lecturer in 1954. He quickly set up his laboratory in Lisle Street. In 1959 Wells gained his Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians and in the same year was appointed Director of the Institute of Dermatology at Street John's Hospital and he then accepted a consultancy at Saint Thomas’s Hospital, sharing his time between the two.
This arrangement seemed to suit Wells, he was a shy man able to find comfort working in the relative calmness of his laboratory.
In 1961 he gave the Parkes Weber lecture at the College of Physicians. “Skin disorders Associated with Malabsorption” based on work he had done at Saint Thomas’s Hospital with gastroenterologists and later published in the British Medical Journal.
Wells wrote, together with Geoffrey Dowling, the skin section in many editions of Conybeare’s Textbook of Medicine. George Wells" name is associated with the rare condition eosinophilic cellulitis after he first described lieutenant
(Wells" syndrome). A patchy inflammatory condition of the skin characterised by what he called “flame figures” from the shapes of the inflamed patches on the skin.