Frederick Banting

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Frederick Grant Banting, born November 14, 1891 in Alliston, Ontario, Canada - died February 21, 1941, was a medical scientist.

After studying medicine at the University of Toronto, Frederick Banting served in the Canadian Army Medical Corps during World War I.

In 1922, while doing research at a University of Toronto laboratory, he and his young assistant, Dr. Charles Best discovered the pancreatic hormone insulin, one of the most significant advances in medicine at the time. Until this time, the millions of people worldwide who suffered from the endocrinal disease, diabetes, could not be treated and it was one of the leading causes of death. People suffered from problems with fat and protein metabolism, leading to blindness and then death only a short time after the onset of the illness.

In 1923 Dr. Banting would receive the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work and in 1934 King George V of England bestowed a knighthood on Sir Frederick Banting.

At the pinnacle of his brilliant career, Dr. Banting was killed on February 21, 1941 when his plane crashed as he prepared to assist in World War II. He is interred in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.


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