Harrison was a key innovator in the creation of anti-D therapies with them. The many anti-D dosages, including Harrison’s,
Helped guarantee that many Australian infants would live long and happy lives, despite the fact that one in two babies with rhesus disease would die.
There are many people who are thankful for Harrison’s role in the battle against HDFN, even after he passed away quietly.
In his sleep at Peninsula Village Nursing Home on February 17. Among them is Tracey Mellowship, who is not only Harrison’s daughter.
But also has had the anti-D vaccination, as have her father’s two grandkids. “He was also very proud to have saved so many lives, without any pain or expense,”
Mellowship added. He was pleased to learn that his generosity had created several families just like ours. “The life you save could be your own, and it doesn’t hurt,” he would constantly say.