Major-General Sir Arnold Walmsley Stott, KBE, FRCP (7 July 1885 – 15 June 1958) was a British physician, specialising in cardiovascular disease.
[3] He was an assistant to the noted cardiologist Sir Thomas Lewis, and worked in the pathology and children's departments of St Bartholomew's Hospital as a house physician.
[2][4] During the First World War, he served as a pathologist with the Royal Army Medical Corps, seeing active service in France.
[4] He served in France until the Dunkirk evacuation,[1] and then worked with the British Army and the Emergency Hospital Service in the Midlands.
[2][1] He practised as a physician and taught medical students, in addition to acting as an administrator of the hospital in the run up to the creation of the National Health Service and during its early years.