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Ellis Douek

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Ellis Douek
Born(1934-04-25)April 25, 1934
Cairo,Egypt
DiedMay 20, 2024(2024-05-20)(aged 90)
London,United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)surgeon andcochlear implantpioneer
RelativesClaudia Roden(sister)

Ellis DouekFRCS(1934-2024) was a British surgeon andcochlear implantpioneer.

Early life

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He was born inCairo,Egypt, in 1934, the son of Cesar Elie Douek and his wife Nelly Sassoon.[1][2][3]His parents were both fromSyrian-Jewishmerchant families, and he grew up inZamalek,Cairo, with his sisterClaudia,and brother Zaki.[4][2]

Career

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Cochlear implants

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"During the 1970s, a group in the United Kingdom, headed by Ellis Douek, began experimenting with an extracochlear electrode that was stationed on the promontory near the round window... this device created a great deal of interest because it was judge to be the more conservative, less invasive, approach."[6]

"In Britain... [I]t all started in the early 1970s, soon after Ellis Douek's appointment to a senior ear, nose and throat post at London’s Guy's Hospital. The Department of Health, prompted by a deafened Member of Parliament active on behalf of the disabled (Jack Ashley,now Lord Ashley), suggested to Douek that his speciality was doing far too little on sensorineural deafness, and why didn't he do something in that area? "[7]

Autobiographies

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Douek is the author of the autobiographyA Middle Eastern Affair(2004)ISBN978-1870015875,and the medical memoirTo Hear Again, To Sing Again(2022).[8]

References

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  1. ^https:// pressreader /uk/the-jewish-chronicle/20110304/283287454146938.Retrieved2 April2018– via PressReader.{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|title=(help)
  2. ^ab"Jews of Egypt, with Dr Ellis Douek".harif.org.17 August 2013.Retrieved2 April2018.
  3. ^"Claudia Roden | Jewish Women's Archive".Jwa.org. 2009-03-20.Retrieved2012-03-27.
  4. ^Pownall, Elfreda (13 July 2014)."Claudia Roden: an interview with the champion of Middle Eastern food".Retrieved2 April2018– via telegraph.co.uk.
  5. ^abcdefgWho's Who 2017, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2017;http:// ukwhoswho
  6. ^Clinical Management of Children With Cochlear Implants, Second Edition edited by Laurie S. Eisenberg, Plural Publishing San Diego, p.7;ISBN1-944883-24-X
  7. ^The Artificial Ear: Cochlear Implants and the Culture of Deafness, Stuart Blume, Rutgers University Press, New Jersey, 2010, p. 41;ISBN0-8135-4911-6
  8. ^Douek, Ellis (2022).To Hear Again, to Sing Again.doi:10.1142/12811.ISBN978-981-12-5543-4.S2CID246399992.