Dr Montague P. Joyston-Bechal (Westminster Medical School 1954)
Provided by Dr Sally Joyston-Bechal, written by Griffith Edwards (DM Emeritus Professor of Addition Behavious, King's College London) and originally published in the Psychiatric Bulletin
Montague Joyston -Bechal DPM FRCP, FRCPsych was a psychiatrist whose temperament fitted him well for his chosen career. He was by nature curious about the human condition, but with a curiosity tempered by compassion, courtesy, humour and abounding empathy. Small wonder that as a clinician he was held in high and affectionate esteem by patients and colleagues alike.
Montague in 1948 went up as a medical student to Queen's College, Oxford. There he cut a more dashing figure than many of his contemporaries, acted, and gave parties which Kenneth Tynan might attend. Despite these distractions he completed his pre-clinical studies and obtained a degree in physiology with seeming effortlessness. He proceeded to clinical training at the Westminster Hospital where he played the lead in Hospital pantomimes, and qualified BM BCh in 1954. National Service followed as an RAF medical officer in Sri Lanka, which allowed him to act as medical officer during the filming of Bridge over the River Kwai, a posting which Montague much enjoyed. On demobilisation he took a six month GP appointment job in Australia, married Sally whom he met in Perth, came back to London and having passed the MRCP enrolled in the intellectually demanding three-year postgraduate psychiatry training at the Maudsley.
At the Maudsley, Montague made lasting friendships with a number of contemporaries - a capacity for friendship was another of his prime gifts. Having qualified in psychiatry with the Academic DPM, he held a senior registrar position at the London Hospital before obtaining a consultant appointment at Shenley in 1967, and held appointments at Edgware General and the Wembley Hospital. In 1974 he was appointed a consultant psychiatrist at the Central Middlesex Hospital and gave the next 16 years of his professional life to nurturing his clinical base at the Central Middlesex, and to the generous giving of himself and his skills to his patients and to the junior staff who trained under him. He gave his time to numerous hospital committees.
There was also still the party goer, the good conversationalist, the man who kept up with a cultural life, but that never diminished his commitment to the NHS. He was a general psychiatrist with a specialty in psychotherapy and sexual problems. He developed a successful private practice and expertise in medico-legal work, with those activities continuing after his retirement from the NHS in 1990 and up to his 79th year. His publications included a paper written in 1966 on the puzzling condition of Stupor.
Those of us who had the privilege of knowing Montague personally, are likely to assert that he exemplified what his profession in important ways should at the very best be about. Beyond that professional distinction we will remember him for his boundless and multiple wider enthusiasms - London life, trout fishing in Oxfordshire, literary festivals attended, a love of jazz, wide travel, a taste for fine beer. He could strike up a friendly conversation with any stranger met. His marriage to Sally, who after a career in academic dentistry established herself as a successful sculptor, added incomparably to the richness of his life. He is survived by Sally, his two sons and daughters-in-Iaws and three grandchildren who further contribute to a happy circle of family life.
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