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Tampilkan postingan dengan label obituary. Tampilkan semua postingan

Jumat, 25 Februari 2011

Obit: Dr. Edwin D. Kilbourne

Dr. Kilbourne, source: NYT
Edwin Kilbourne MD, who was a graduate of Cornell Medical College and an accomplished influenza researcher, died earlier this week at the age of 90.  He was most widely known for his involvement in the swine flu epidemic of 1976. There is a nice obituary in today's NY Times.

Kamis, 05 Agustus 2010

Thomas Peebles (1921-2010)

Dr. Peebles, who was known for discovering and culturing the measles virus and also shifting the tetanus booster schedule from annual injections to every ten years, died July 8th but he death was just announced in a NY Times obituary. In the non-ID world, he was known for his work on flouride vitamins for children.

There were several interesting things about him that I didn't know, but the most amazing was the fact that when he discovered how to grow the measles virus, no one in the lab believed him including John Enders. Dr. Enders even took him off of the measles project and Dr. Peebles had to complete the work on the side on his own time. When he finally was able to infect monkeys using the cultured virus, they knew he had done it. This discovery led directly to the development of the measles vaccine and numerous lives saved.

In 1967, when discussing the measles discovery, Dr Peebles wrote “I am sure, as is often the case in scientific endeavor, that much of the successful recognition and isolation of this virus lay in perseverance, newness to the field, and failure to be bound by preconceived ideas that caused others in the laboratory to miss this new effect."

There is much truth in his words. Successful scientists are often immune to the dogma that surrounds them. If only the scientific community could find better ways to identify and support such free thinking individuals.

Rabu, 04 Agustus 2010

Robert Chanock (1924-2010)

There are few that have contributed as much to our understanding of infectious diseases as Dr. Chanock. His career was most tightly linked to his discovery of RSV and subsequent vaccines including the one in trials today. However, when he was chief of NIAID's Laboratory of Infectious Diseases from 1968-2001, his work involved other important viruses including norovirus, Hep A, rotavirus, West Nile, etc etc. Oh, and the first intranasal influenza vaccine. The picture is from a 1999 story in the NIH Record. There are several nice obituaries: