Witold Chodźko


Witold Chodźko was a Polish social activist, freemason, public health pioneer, neurologist and psychiatrist.
Witold Chodźko was born on 1 November 1875 in Piotrków Trybunalski and graduated in 1899 cum eximia laude from the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Warsaw. He had internships in neurology and psychiatry in Paris and Graz, then worked as a psychiatrist in Lublin hospitals, was active in the educational-charitable association "Light", and was one of the founders of the Society "A Drop of Milk", an institution that ran in Lublin an infant feeding program.
In the years 1907-1914 he was the director of a psychiatric hospital in Kochanówka near Lodz, which he expanded and modernized. He created there departments of therapy and rehabilitation through work-related activities. Together with his medical team Chodzko conducted active scientific research. During that period he represented Polish psychiatry at international congresses. During the First World War he was director of the St. John of God hospital in Warsaw, and in 1916 he was elected to the City Council. At that time he became involved in the organization of public health care. From 1918 to 1923 he was Undersecretary of State, then Minister in the first Polish Ministry of Health, Labor Protection and Welfare. It was said that “his heart was open equally to the crowd and the individuals. This was the first Polish Minister whom any citizen of the state, whether unemployed, beggar or a child, could get to meet twice a week, without reporting first to the secretaries”.
He presented several public health law proposals, including care for the mentally ill, public access to treatments in health spas, preventive vaccination programs, and introduced the idea of community/district nurses. He opposed the drafting of eugenics ideas into law, since this could have been a prelude to racist activities. Chodzko created and held the Office of the Extraordinary Commissioner for the fight against epidemics. He also led the Polish Committee for the Aid to Children ; he was the government commissioner of the Association of Funds for the Sick. From 1926 to 1939, the National School of Hygiene operated on his initiative and under his management at the National Institute of Hygiene in Warszawa.
He was the first president of the Polish Psychiatrists’ Association. He was also the president of the Supreme Chamber of Medicine and of the Society of Preventive Medicine, the discipline that was of particular interest to him. He also served as president of the Polish Society of Social Medicine. Chodzko was also a freemason, acting as member of the masonic lodge “The Truth”.
From 1920 until 1938 he was in the delegation of the Polish Government to the Assembly of the League of Nations, the International Office of Public Hygiene, and to the International Sanitary Conferences. His main activities were focused on public health of rural areas, fight against drugs and against trafficking of women and children. During World War II Chodzko worked as a custodian guarding the collections of the National Institute of Hygiene’s library and as head of the health section of the Warsaw’s Social Welfare Committee.
From 1945 he was associate professor, and from 1947 – full professor and chairman of the Department of General Hygiene at the Faculty of Medicine of the Marie Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin. In 1951 he founded the Institute of Occupational Medicine and Rural Hygiene, currently the Witold Chodzko Institute of Rural Medicine, named in his honor.
He was awarded many Polish and foreign decorations.
He died in Lublin on 17 January 1954 and was buried at the Powązki Cemetery in Warszawa.
A Polish NGO, fundacja Salus Publica na rzecz Zdrowia Publicznego im. prof. Witolda Chodźko was established in 2009 in Krakow, Poland, and named in Chodźko's honor.