Become a Member
The Jewish Chronicle

Obituary: Dr Sam Michael Tucker

Inventor of auditory cradle to assess deafness in newborns

September 6, 2018 10:37
Obituaries.png
3 min read

The eminent paediatrician Sam Tucker, who has died aged 91, was a specialist  in the deafness of newborn babies, heart conditions and ADHD. He was acclaimed for his role as the medical half of the Brunel University team  who set up a hearing foundation at Hillingdon Hospital and invented  the first portable cradle to detect deafness in a newborn baby within the first week of life. 

The auditory reponse cradle was pioneering technology, since previously it could take up to a year to determine whether a child had hearing problems, by which time its development was already seriously impaired. Tucker admitted that the newborn hearing unit at Hillingdon Hospital was probably his finest achievement. It is now the international testing standard for newborn hearing loss.

The middle of three sons, Sam Tucker was born in Benoni, South Africa to Harry and Ray Tucker, who had arrived there from Lithuania in the early 1900’s. Like his elder brother Mossie and younger brother Percy,  Sam was educated at Benoni High School, where he developed a lifelong love of football. In his youth, Tucker played football for the Eastern Transvaal and later represented South Africa in the first Maccabi games in Israel in 1950. 

He  left school in 1944 during the Second World War and joined the South African Air Force. His training as a navigator stood him in good stead when he volunteered to serve with the fledgling Israeli air force in 1948 as part of the renowned South African unit of the élite fighting force, the Palmach. He flew over Syria in a flying fortress plane and as a key navigator, participated in many critical air force missions ,releasing bombs by hand.