American physician Jane Cooke Wright (November 20, 1919
– February 19, 2013) was a prominent twentieth-century cancer researcher.
The daughter of a prominent physician, Jane
Cooke Wright followed her father into medicine and eventually became the Highest-Ranked
African-American Woman at a major medical institution. Her contributions to the
nascent field of chemotherapy have led some to call her “the Mother of
Chemotherapy.”
BORN INTO A MEDICAL
FAMILY:
Born
in New York City on November 20,
1919, to Dr.
Louis Tompkins Wright and
elementary school teacher Corinne Cooke Wright,
Jane Cooke Wright came from a
long line of pioneers in the field of medicine. Her paternal grandfather, Dr. Ceah Ketcham
Wright, was a graduate of the Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee; after he died, her
paternal grandmother married Dr. William Fletcher Penn, the First African-American to graduate from Yale Medical School. This man inspired Wright's father, Louis Tompkins Wright, who attended Harvard Medical
School in the face of racial
discrimination. Louis Wright later
went on to become a successful surgeon and medical researcher and was the First
African-American to be a staff physician at a New York City hospital. Writing in To Fathom
More: African American Scientists and Inventors, Edward Sidney
Jenkins commented, “That these men, and the families who supported and
encouraged them, could aim so high, even in the shadows of slavery, and achieve
such lofty goals, is a striking commentary on their character.” Both
Jane Cooke Wright and her younger
sister, Barbara,
followed in the family tradition and became doctors.
Wright
was educated in New York City, first
at the private Ethical
Culture elementary school and
later at the Fieldston
School, where she particularly enjoyed science and mathematics. She
also served as art editor for the yearbook and became captain of the swim team.
After graduating from Fieldston in
1938, she attended Smith College in
Massachusetts on a scholarship.
There, she excelled in her studies and swam on the varsity swim team. She also
studied German, living for a time in the college's German house. Although she
briefly considered pursuing art or physics as a career, Wright settled on medicine. After graduating from Smith in 1942, she enrolled at New York Medical
College, again attending on a scholarship due to her academic
strength.
Due to World War II, the college required students
to complete their studies in only three years, and in 1945 Wright graduated
from the college with honors and began an internship at Bellevue Hospital in
New York City. She
remained at Bellevue for nine months
as an assistant in internal medicine. After completing this internship, she
continued her training at Harlem Hospital, where she served as a
resident in internal medicine in 1947 and 1948. Also in 1947, she married David D. Jones
Jr., a graduate of Harvard Law
School; the couple would later have two daughters, Jane and Allison.
After completing her training, Wright
continued to work at Harlem Hospital.
In 1949 she took a position as a staff physician with the New York City public school system,
and continued to serve as a visiting physician at Harlem Hospital.
BECAME CANCER RESEARCHER:
In 1948 Dr. Louis Tompkins Wright, Jane Cooke
Wright's father, had founded the Harlem Hospital Cancer Research Foundation to
investigate the possibilities for and effectiveness of chemotherapy drugs in
cancer treatment. The
following year, Jane Cooke Wright
joined the staff of the Harlem Cancer
Research Foundation as a clinician; Jenkins
noted that “she
made the transition from medical practice to medical researcher quickly and
smoothly.” Much of her work centered on patient trials. Wright studied the reactions of
different drugs and chemotherapy techniques on tumors, as well as what her
biography in Notable Scientists: From 1900 to
the Present called “the complex
relationships and variations between test animal and patient, tissue sample and
patient, and individual patient responses to various chemotherapeutic agents.”
In 1951 the researchers had some success in using the drug methotrexate to destroy breast cancer cells; up to that time,
what little research had been conducted focused on the drug's efficacy with
cancers of the lymph
nodes or blood, rather than cancerous tumors. With her father, Wright also performed research into the
effects of triethylene
melamine. When Dr. Louis Tompkins Wright died in 1952, Jane Cooke Wright
became the head of the Harlem Cancer Research Foundation.
Other
cancer researchers began to acknowledge the importance of the discoveries made
by Wright and her team of researchers. During the 1940s and 1950s, chemotherapy
was a new, untested cancer treatment that many physicians either disregarded or
outright ridiculed for its presumed ineffectiveness in aiding cancer patients.
Despite these obstacles, Wright
continued to seek out all the information she could find on chemotherapy
research and developments, reading widely, attending conferences, and sharing
knowledge with other national and international researchers.
ADVANCED CHEMOTHERAPY
TREATMENT:
When
Wright left the Harlem Cancer Research Foundation in 1955 to take a position at the
New York
University Bellevue Medical Center, she continued her research. In
1961 she became an adjunct professor of research surgery at the medical center,
where she remained until 1967. That year, Wright
left to accept a position as associate dean and professor of surgery at New York Medical
College; Wright's biography on
the National
Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health Web site noted that “at a time when African American women physicians numbered
only a few hundred in the entire United States, Dr. Wright was the Highest Ranked African American Woman at a Nationally Recognized Medical Institution.”
She remained at
the college until her retirement, creating a program of study into cancer,
heart diseases, and stroke, as well as one to teach doctors how to use
chemotherapy in addition to conducting medical research.
Wright
was particularly interested in the effectiveness of a series of chemotherapeutic
drugs administered in a specified order, rather than simply as a
combination of medicines; her research into this idea was the first of its kind. Wright
also began experimenting with different drugs and cancer tissues in order to
determine the specific effects of certain drugs and thus increase the
effectiveness of chemotherapy treatment for different forms of cancer. Jenkins noted that “this was a significant contribution because then there
were few guidelines for any chemotherapy procedures.” Wright and her team
developed new techniques of administering drugs that ultimately led to an
increased reduction of cancer cells via chemotherapy.
In 1960 Wright and her fellow researchers
successfully caused a form of skin cancer to regress using chemotherapy. Before this accomplishment, the cancer had been treated with radiation
therapy. Wright noticed that by including chemotherapy in early cancer
treatments, the lifespan of the treated cancer patients increased by up to ten
years.
Because the drugs used in chemotherapy can be
harmful to patients, Wright worked to develop treatment guidelines to provide
the maximum benefit to patients with a minimum danger of drug intolerance. Wright carefully monitored all chemotherapy patients,
lessening or stopping treatment if a person showed signs of damage from the
drugs. She also stopped chemotherapy treatment on patients whose tumors
disappeared or, in certain circumstances, were greatly reduced in size. Wright
had the joy of seeing some of her patients with advanced stages of cancer
recover and live for years after chemotherapy treatments.
A RESPECTED CAREER:
Wright's many contributions to the field of
chemotherapy included services other than research. In 1957 she traveled to
Ghana on a medical mission; four years later she returned to Africa
representing the African Research and Medical Foundation. She would later serve
as vice president of that foundation from 1973 to 1984. Wright also led a
delegation of medical professionals to China, Eastern Europe, and the Soviet
Union as an ambassador of People to People International.
Wright was a member of the highly-respected
American Association for Cancer Research, a professional organization dedicated
to the study of cancer treatments, and later served on its board of directors.
In 1964 she helped found the American Society of Clinical Oncology (cancer
medicine); within 15 years, this organization's membership grew from 60 to
8,800. Wright also held membership in the New York City Division of the
American Cancer Society, the Medical Advisory Board of the Skin Cancer
Foundation, and the New York Cancer Society. In 1971 she became the New York
Cancer Society's First Female President.
Wright also sat on many government committees. In
1964 President Lyndon B. Johnson invited Wright to serve on the cancer
subcommittee of the President's Commission of Heart Disease, Cancer, and
Stroke. Her suggestions as part of this commission led to the foundation of
regional cancer centers throughout the United States. From 1966 to 1970, Wright
served on the National Cancer Advisory Committee, and from 1966 until her
retirement she also sat on several committees under the umbrella of the
Department of Health and Human Services.
Wright received a number of awards for
contributions to cancer research. One of her first came in 1952 from Mademoiselle magazine. In 1965 the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine awarded Wright its Spirit of Achievement
Award; two years later, she was a recipient of the Hadassah Myrtle Wreath
award. The following year, Smith College awarded her the Smith Medal. During
the 1960s and 1970s Wright was also recognized by the American Association for
Cancer Research, the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, and Denison
University. Later, Wright was featured in a poster series of “Exceptional Black
Scientists” released by CIBA-GEIGY and included by the Smithsonian Institution
in its traveling exhibit Black Women:
Achievement Against the Odds.
RETIREMENT YEARS:
Becoming an emeritus professor, Wright retired
from the New York Medical College and active cancer research in 1987. In the
years since then, she has spent much of her time pursuing her hobbies, which
include watercolor painting, reading mystery stories, and sailing. At her Smith
College 50-year class reunion in 1992, Wright spoke about the place of cancer
during the history of the human race, noting that the increases in life span
aided by chemotherapy she had witnessed during her life time “justified her
faith in chemotherapy as a major weapon against a tough adversary,” according
to Jenkins.
In 2006 Wright's personal and professional papers
were added to the Sophia Smith collection at the Smith College archives. Also
in 2006, the first “Minorities in Cancer Research Jane Cooke Wright
Lectureship,” named in honor of Wright's contributions to the field of cancer
research, was awarded by the American Association of Cancer Research to
Nigerian scientist and researcher Professor Olufunmilayo Olopade. According to
the Africa News, “The
Lectureship is given to an outstanding scientist who has made meritorious
contributions to the field of cancer research and who has, through leadership
or by example, furthered the advancement of minority investigators in cancer
research.” This description encapsulates the legacy of Jane Cooke Wright, whose
own contributions to cancer research—including 135 scientific papers and
contributions to nine books—have had significant and lasting effects on the
field of medicine.
Books
Jenkins, Edward Sidney, To Fathom More: African American
Scientists and Inventors, University Press of America, 1996.
Notable Black American Women, Book 1, Gale Research, 1992.
Notable Scientists: From 1900 to the Present, Gale Group, 2001.
Sammons, Vivian Ovelton, Blacks in Science and Medicine,
Hemisphere, 1990.
Periodicals
Africa News, April 18, 2006.
Online
“Changing the Face of Medicine: Dr. Jane Cooke Wright,” National
Library of Medicine, http://www.nlm.nih.gov/changingthefaceodmedicine/physicians/biography_336.html,
(December 30, 2007).
“Jane C. Wright Papers, 1920–2006 Finding Aid,” Sophia Smith
Collection, Smith College, http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/sophiasmith/mnsss402.html, (December 30, 2007).
Cite this article
"Wright, Jane Cooke." Encyclopedia of World Biography. . Encyclopedia.com. 27 Dec. 2016 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.
"Wright, Jane Cooke." Encyclopedia of World Biography. . Encyclopedia.com. 27 Dec. 2016 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.
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