Holland was born on 5 March 1929 in Teplice-Sanov, Czechoslovakia, part of the German-speaking Sudetenland, to a Jewish family.[4] His parents were Henry Holland and Hertha Zentner. With the rise of Hitler the family fled to England in 1939, just in time. His grandfather who remained in Czechoslovakia died shortly afterwards but his grandmother was deported to Theresienstadt
(Terezín) concentration camp where she perished.[5]
He attended Rugby School and then went to St Thomas's Hospital Medical School where he qualified in medicine in 1954, having obtained a first degree in Physiology. He served in the Royal Air Force, attached to the Epidemiological Research Laboratory at Colindale, North London and, after a further appointment as Lecturer to the Department of Medicine at St Thomas's, he was made MRC Clinical Research Fellow in the Department of Epidemiology and Medical Statistics at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. This was followed by a year in the Department of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and then his return to St Thomas's in 1962 and his appointment to Professor in 1968.
It was at St. Thomas's that Holland developed his academic reputation. He was appointed Chair of Clinical Epidemiology and Social Medicine and established the Department of Community Medicine.[6] He subsequently established the associated Health Services Research Unit with core funding from the Department of Health. He assembled a large staff including epidemiologists, social scientists and statisticians. They conducted a large number of studies on epidemiology of chronic respiratory disease, blood pressure, smoking, air pollution and the application of epidemiologic principles to health services research.[7][8] He established strong links with fellow public health researchers in the United States, Australia and Japan.[9]
He retired as Emeritus Professor of Public Health Medicine in 1994 and was appointed Visiting Professor at London School of Economics.[10]
Work
Holland has had a very wide contribution to the development of epidemiology and public health. His groundbreaking paper on validation of medical screening procedures, published jointly with fellow epidemiologist Archie Cochrane in 1971, became a classic in the field.[11]
Legacy
The London School of Economics established two prizes in his honour. These are the Walter Holland Prize for Best Dissertation and the Walter Holland Prize for Best Overall Performance which are awarded annually to MSc Global Health Policy students.[12]
Some publications
Books
Holland, WW. Improving Health Services,Background,Methods and Applications. Edward Elgar,Cheltenham 2013,1-271
Holland WW, Olsen J, Florey C du V. The Development of Modern Epidemiology. Oxford University Press, London
Holland WW. Screening in disease prevention : what works? 2005.
Alin, S., Mossialos E, McKee M & Holland WW. Making decisions on public health: a review of eight countries. 2004
Detels R, Holland WW, McEwen J, Omenn GS. Oxford Textbook of Public Health, 3rd edition. 1997
Holland WW, Stewart S. Screening in Health Care. Benefit of Bane? Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust, London 1990
Articles
Capewell, S., McCarney, M., & Holland, WW. NHS Health Checks—a naked emperor? Journal of Public Health, 2015
Holland, WW. Public health coming home. Journal of Public Health, 2015
Holland, WW. Lessons from the past. International Journal of Health Planning and Management, 2014,
Holland, WW. How to improve our health services, Clinical medicine (London, England), 2014
Holland, WW. Austerity: A failed experiment on the people of Europe. Clinical medicine (London, England). 2012.
Holland, WW. Measuring the quality of medical care. Journal of Health Services Research & Policy, 2009.
Holland WW. Healthcare for London. Clinical medicine (London, England), 2008
Holland, WW. Healthcare for London: A Framework for Action. Clinical medicine (London, England), 2008
Holland, WW. Public health epidemiology in the health technology assessment: risks and opportunities. European Journal of Public Health, 2007.
Holland, WW, Stewart, S & Masseria, C. Policy Brief: Screening in Europe. 2006.
Allin S, Mossialos E, McKee M, Holland WW. The Wanless report and decision-making in public health. Journal of Public Health, 2005.
Holland WW. Health technology assessment and public health: A commentary. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care. 2004
^"Walter Holland". London School of Economics. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
^Chinn, Susan (2018). "Walter Werner Holland, 1929–2018". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society. 181 (3): 911–912. doi:10.1111/rssa.12371.
^Oral history – Walter Holland, Journal of Public Health Medicine, 26(2), 121–129