"Rare" is probably the operative
word when describing the career of Dr Tay Chong Hai who was a pupil
of the V.I. from 1947 to 1953. How rare it was then (as it
is now) to find a schoolboy with a love of writing poetry, much
less a science student - but Chong Hai was that rare bird indeed.
He was active in the Science and Mathematics Society and edited a
cyclostyled publication of the Society called The Quack.
In 1953, he conceived the idea of a formal science magazine for
the Society and became the first editor of The Scientific
Victorian. He was also the literary editor of the V.I.
Voice which first appeared in June 1953 that later became
The Seladang. He pseudonymously created a character named
Ah Fatt, a Billy Bunteresque V.I. boy whose adventures appeared in
both publications. It was such an instant hit that Ah Fatt became
the talk of the school for some time. He wrote poems prolifically
during his V.I. days and submitted many of them to Young
Malayans and The Singapore Standard newspaper. When he
left school, Chong Hai presented the School Library with two volumes
of his poems, Some Selected Poems and A Malayan Ballad.
He obtained his M.B.B.S. at the University of
Malaya in Singapore and proceeded to England for further studies.
He was appointed consultant physician to the Singapore General
Hospital in 1971 and subsequently headed the Department of Medicine
at Changi Hospital. Since 1978, he has been in private practice as a
consultant physician and rheumatologist at Mount Elizabeth Hospital,
Gleneagles Hospital, Mount Alvernia Hospital and East Shore Hospital
in Singapore. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of
Glasgow and also a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of
Physicians. He founded the Society of Immunology, Allergy and
Rheumatology and, to date, has authored over 120 articles in
peer-reviewed journals.
In 1969, this rare personage discovered a
rare syndrome associated with intellectual impairment, decreased
fertility with short stature, ichthyosis and brittle hair which
is now documented worldwide as Tay's Syndrome (also as IBIDS
Syndrome or Trichothiodystrophy). Early in 1972, he sounded an
alert on the outbreak of foot and mouth disease in East Malaysia,
Taiwan and Singapore. In the nineties, Dr Tay uncovered another
rarity - a condition described by him as Eosinophilic Arthritis
affecting mainly the knees, ankles and shoulders with eosinophilia
being the only extra-articular manifestation.
A pioneer in rheumatology in Singapore, he
was the founder chairman of the Singapore National Arthritis
Foundation in 1984. Dr Tay has investigated traditional Chinese
medicine and highlighted the problems of high levels of arsenic,
lead and mercury that are sometimes present in herbal medicine.
He also drew attention to the problem of adulteration of Chinese
medicines with Western medicines and warned against the misuse
of cortisone. Dr Tay was conferred the Life Fellowship of the
American Academy of Dermatology in 1998.
Besides his passion for medicine, Tay Chong Hai
still dares to dream and, in 1977, published a collection of his
poems, The Birth of a New Day. They are reproduced below
with his permission: