Geoffrey Duncan Chisholm, CBE, FRCS, MRCS (30 September 1931 – 10 November 1994) was a New Zealand-born, British urologist.
[3] Chisholm returned to London soon after graduating and began specialising in urological subjects with a strong academic component.
In 1961, Chisholm began a three-year period of work and study in the US, under a Medical Foundation Travelling Fellowship, beginning at the Brady Urological Institute and then moving to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore before finally ending in the White Memorial Hospital in Los Angeles.
In 1972, Chisholm returned to Scotland as a lecturer the University of Edinburgh, becoming a full Professorship in 1977,[4] replacing the recently retired Sir Michael Woodruff.
[1] Chisholm portrait, painted in 1959 by Victoria Crowe, hangs in the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.