Postgraduate
MSc and Postgraduate Diploma in Clinical Trials
Staff
Profiles
The
following are some of the staff involved in the development and support
of this MSc and Postgraduate Diploma.
John
Ackers
graduated from Oxford with a BA in chemistry in 1964 and a DPhil
in glycoprotein biochemistry in 1967. He worked first on improving whooping-cough
(Bordetella pertussis) vaccines at the Lister Institute and subsequently
on the immunological diagnosis of Trichomonas vaginalis at the School.
Professor
of Public Health Education, John’s research interests are concentrated
on Entamoeba histolytica, but he still retains great affection for T.
vaginalis, which is coming to seem both common and important in many
parts of the world. He is also the School’s Distance Learning Co-ordinator,
responsible for the content and the quality of the distance learning
courses.
Ben
Armstrong
After completing a doctorate in medical statistics at LSHTM in 1983,
Ben Armstrong was a Professor of Biostatistics for 12 years in the departments
of Occupational Health and of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at McGill
University in Montreal. He joined the Environmental Epidemiology Unit
at LSHTM in 1995. His research interests include various aspects of
statistical methods for epidemiological studies and cancer epidemiology.
Nick
Black
trained in public health medicine, after four years’ clinical experience
in hospital and community services. From 1985–93, he was Head of the
Health Services Research Unit at LSHTM.
His
principal research interests are the assessment of the effectiveness
and appropriateness of health care interventions, in particular those
of surgical procedures, the development of outcome measures, medical
audit methods, and the implications of research findings in health policy
and services. He is Professor of Health Services Research and Head of
the department of Public Health and Policy.
Steve
Bond
graduated in physics with astrophysics from the University of Manchester,
then studied in the Department of Meteorology at the University of Edinburgh
for a PhD in microwave remote sensing. He stayed in the same department
to work as a developer on the EuroMET project, a European collaboration
to produce web-based training in meteorology for students and forecasters.
He
is employed full-time at LSHTM to program the computer-based parts of
the distance-based MSc in Epidemiology: Principles and Practice, and
to provide technical support to the project as a whole.
Jane
Bruce
graduated in mathematics in 1988, then worked as a statistician
at the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre (CDSC) in the UK. Whilst
working at CDSC Jane was intensively involved in work on outbreak investigations,
national surveillance projects and the statistical training of public
health professionals. During this time she completed an MSc in Medical
Statistics at LSHTM. She joined the Communicable Disease Epidemiology
Unit at LSHTM in 1996 to work on a large epidemiological study based
in Malawi and became involved in the school’s teaching programme. Since
January 1998 Jane has been working on the development of the distance-based
MSc in Epidemiology: Principles and Practice.
Daniel
Chandramohan
graduated in medicine from the University of Madurai (India), then
worked as a primary health care physician in India, Ethiopia and Zimbabwe
for 16 years. He undertook an MSc in Public Health in Developing Countries
at LSHTM and joined its staff in 1992. His research interests include
epidemiology and control of malaria, indirect methods to assess causes
of death and maternal health.
R.
Elliott Churchill
After receiving degrees in geology and mathematics, Elliott’s first
professional appointment was as a medical technologist in cardiology
at the North Carolina Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, NC. She later
received her Master of Science degree in Communications from UNC Chapel
Hill and went on to hold teaching positions at different American universities.
Elliott
began working at the CDC in 1972, and in 1980 she became the Chief for
Editorial Services in the Epidemiology Program Office (EPO). As of 1996,
she serves as the Special Projects Co-ordinator in EPO’s Division of
International Health.
Simon
Croft
graduated in zoology at Durham University and completed a PhD in
Parasitology at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. His research
experience is mainly in leishmaniasis and trypanosomiasis, and antiprotozoal
chemotherapy, including several years with the pharmaceutical industry.
He joined LSHTM in 1987.
His
current research interests include chemotherapy of leishmaniasis, trypanosomiasis
and malaria; interactions between antimicrobial drugs and the immune
response, and novel drug delivery systems.
Hazel
Dockrell
obtained a BA in Microbiology from Trinity College, Dublin in 1974,
and a PhD in immunology from the University of London in 1978. She worked
as a postdoctoral research fellow, in the Department of Immunology in
the Middlesex Hospital Medical School, on the immunology of malaria.
She joined LSHTM in 1985 to work on immunity to leprosy, where she is
now a Reader in Immunology in the new Department of Infectious and Tropical
Diseases.
Her
research interests include human T cell immunity, and cytokine responses
in leprosy and tuberculosis. She also co-ordinates a number of overseas
collaborations including links with Pakistan, Mexico, Portugal and The
Gambia.
Bohumil
Drasar
A bacteriologist by profession and an ecologist by inclination,
Bohumil Drasar is interested in the ways microbial ecology can influence
patterns of disease and the pathogenesis of infection. Though about
half his career has been in research, he has reformed the School’s teaching,
starting in 1983 with the PhD programme, then the MScs, and most recently
introducing the DrPH.
For
10 years his research focused on gut bacteria and their role in mediating
the effects of diet, drug and xenobiotics on the host. A recent focus
is serious pathogens of environmental origin, e.g. Vibrio cholerae,
Legionella pneumophila and Burkholderia pseudomallei. The use of tissue
culture systems for the study of toxicity and mechanisms of pathogenicity
is an ongoing interest.
Astrid
Fletcher
is an epidemiologist and has worked at LSHTM since 1992. She has
been involved in the Epidemiology teaching programme and was Course
Director for the MSc in Epidemiology from 1993 to 1998.
Her
main interests are in the epidemiology of ageing, and her research programme
in elderly people includes studies of screening, nutritional epidemiology,
the epidemiology and treatment of hypertension, and ophthalmic epidemiology.
Judith
Green
has a BSc in anthropology and an MSc in medical sociology from the
University of London. Her PhD study was on the sociology of accidents.
She has also researched and published on patients’ views of their health
care, and the organisation of primary care, emergency admissions and
methodology. She is now Lecturer in Sociology in Health Services Research.
Reinhold
Gruen
graduated in medicine from Free University, Berlin and trained as
a specialist in internal medicine. His doctoral thesis was on a topic
related to viral carcinogenesis. After six years of clinical experience
he switched to management and worked in leading administrative positions
of public health and hospital services and later as an international
health care consultant. He undertook the MSc in Health Services Management
at LSHTM and joined the School staff in 1997.
His
recent areas of research include the economic evaluation of renal services
for the elderly in the UK and human resource development in government
health and family planning services in Bangladesh.
Andy
Hall
originally qualified in medicine. After UK hospital-based training
in infectious diseases he spent two years as a Provincial Medical Officer
in Papua New Guinea. On his return he took an MSc in epidemiology followed
by a PhD whilst working for the MRC Environmental Epidemiology Unit
in Southampton. From there he moved to a post with the International
Agency for Research on Cancer (WHO), based in The Gambia. He moved to
LSHTM in 1990, where he teaches and conducts research on vaccines and
vaccine-preventable diseases.
Michael
Jones
An epidemiologist and statistician, Michael Jones has been working
at LSHTM since he completed his PhD in 1996. He graduated with a BA
in Natural Sciences from Cambridge University and an MSc in Applied
Statistics from Oxford University. Before starting his PhD at LSHTM
in 1992 he worked in Australia and in France at the International Agency
for Research on Cancer. His interests are in cancer epidemiology and
statistical methods for epidemiological studies.
Anthony
Kessel
graduated in medicine in 1989 and has spent the past 10 years specialising
in both general practice and public health. His interest in medical
ethics took root during an MPhil degree in the history and philosophy
of science, which he completed in 1991. He has been actively involved
in medical ethics since then and is currently an ethicist on an NHS
research funding body. In 1996 Anthony received an MSc in Public Health
from LSHTM, and he joined the Epidemiology Unit in 1997.
His
current research focus is Philosophy of Public Health, and he is involved
in a range of teaching activities including epidemiology, public health
and health care ethics. He also spends half his time as a practising
public health physician in North London.
Betty
Kirkwood
joined the LSHTM 18 years ago. Her main current interests are in
strategies to improve vitamin A status; improving health provider performance
and/or appropriate care-seeking behaviour; epidemiology and control
of diarrhoeal diseases and acute respiratory infections and the evaluation
of community-based interventions. She is Head of the department of Epidemiology
and Population Health.
Colin
Leake
took his first degree in zoology at Leeds University UK (1971).
He joined the team in the department of Entomology at LSHTM, pioneering
cultivation of vector cells. In the Arbovirus Unit he undertook work
on laboratory flavivirus vector-interaction, and vector ecology studies
in South East Asia. He now continues fieldwork on dengue vectors in
South America and South East Asia, and laboratory research on vector
competence, insect defence mechanisms and saliva. He has been a lecturer
since 1986.
Li-Wei
Chao
received his MD degree and MA in Public Policy from the University
of Chicago, and is nearing completion of his PhD degree in Economics
at the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania. He is
an appointed Expert in Health Economics at theCanter's for Disease
Control and Prevention.
He
is interested in the areas of theoretical and applied cost benefit and
cost effectiveness analysis, and has played an instrumental role in
government and pharmaceutical company sponsored research in the fields
of family planning, contraceptive choice, HIV risk behaviour, health
insurance reform, pharmaceutical regulation and competition, hospital
total quality management, and comparative health care systems. Dr Chao
has taught economic evaluation in the, the Far East, South Africa,
Spain and Saudi Arabia.
Punam
Mangtani
worked as a clinician in hospital, and in primary health care, before
going on to study for a masters and then a research degree in epidemiology
at LSHTM. Her research interests include infectious diseases such as
influenza and pneumonia, hepatitis B and TB as well as non-communicable
diseases such as breast cancer. She also has general interests in health
economics applied to vaccine preventable diseases, migrant studies and
women’s health.
Tony
McMichael
is an epidemiologist from Australia. After graduating in medicine
and gaining a PhD in epidemiology, he spent four years studying the
causation of occupational diseases at the University of North Carolina,
USA. He subsequently directed a research programme in dietary influences
upon chronic disease aetiology, in Adelaide, Australia, where he also
developed an ongoing interest in environmental lead and childhood intellectual
development.
He
currently has a major interest in environmental epidemiology (and risk
assessment), and is developing research ideas and strategies in relation
to global environmental changes and health. In 1994–96, he co-ordinated
scientific reviews of aspects of this topic for WHO, the UN Environment
Programme, and the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. His
other research interests relate to the health effects of air pollution
and the relationship between diet and cancer.
Charles
Normand
Prior to joining LSHTM, Charles Normand worked at the Queen’s University
of Belfast, University of York, and as Principle Economist for Health
and Social Services in Northern Ireland.
His
research interests are in economic evaluation of hospital services,
health care human resources, health care finance, medical technology
and economics in clinical trials.
Jessica
Ogden
(MA Manchester 1991; PhD Hull 1996) is Research Fellow in Social
Science, on the ODA Tuberculosis Programme at LSHTM. She did her doctoral
work in Kampala, Uganda, focusing on the ways in which women’s reproductive
identity affects their responses to AIDS.
Currently
she is engaged in collaborative operations research on tuberculosis
control in India. Her main research interests include the relationship
between identity and health, and socio-cultural approaches to relevant
interventions for health and public welfare.
Aviva
Petrie
obtained a BSc in statistics from UCL and an MSc in medical statistics
from LSHTM in 1970. She has held posts as lecturer at LSHTM and at the
Royal Postgraduate Medical School, senior lecturer at the Royal Free
Hospital School of Medicine and visiting professor at Stanford University,
California.
She
is currently an honorary lecturer at LSHTM and a part-time consultant/senior
lecturer both at the Eastman Dental Institute and the Royal Veterinary
College of the University of London.
Joceline
Pomerleau
is a Canadian epidemiologist with a particular interest in nutritional
epidemiology. She did a BSc and an MSc in nutrition at the Université
de Montreal (Canada) and a PhD in epidemiology at the University of
Western Ontario (Canada). In 1995, she came to LSHTM as a postdoctoral
fellow to work on the study of ethnic differences in risk factors for
heart disease, hypertension and diabetes. She joined the European Centre
on Health of Societies in Transition (ECOHOST) in March 1999. Her main
current research interest is in the nutritional determinants of health
and disease in countries of the former Soviet Union.
Jennifer
Roberts
studied economics at the London School of Economics where she was
employed until joining LSHTM in 1974. She has worked on unemployment,
regional policy and labour markets in the health sector.
Her
current research interests are in the area of infectious disease: intestinal
infections, E. coli 0157, and Hepatitis C and the perception of risk
of infection in reformed health care markets. Other interests include
the primary and secondary interface including experiments in telemedicine.
Laura
Rodrigues
is a senior lecturer in Communicable Disease Epidemiology. Born
in Brazil, with training and experience in both Brazil and England,
she settled in England in 1981.
Her
main interests are in epidemiological methods applied to infectious
diseases, HIV and AIDS in women, gastrointestinal infections, verbal
autopsy, distance-based learning, tuberculosis, measles, and vaccines
and vaccination programmes.
Cally
Roper
Cally’s background is in population genetics, but she now works
as a Research Fellow at LSHTM, where her research is on P. falciparum
malaria. She is interested in the application of population genetics
to questions of importance for control. These include drug resistance
in parasites, insecticide resistance in vectors and the dynamics that
affect their evolution and spread.
Her
recent work applies molecular population genetic tools to analyse the
impact of seasonal drought on the population structure of Anopheles
arabiensis in KwaZulu, which is carried out in collaboration with colleagues
at the National Malaria Control Program, SAMRC Durban, and is funded
by DfID.
Colin
Sanderson
Colin’s first degree was in engineering, and he has a background
in operational research, statistics and epidemiology. Colin’s research
interests are in quantitative methods for resource allocation and needs
assessment.
Isabel
dos Santos Silva
was born in Portugal, and is working as an epidemiologist in the
Cancer and Public Health Unit at LSHTM. Her current research interests
are mainly in the area of cancer epidemiology. She has been involved
in the analysis of the geographical distribution of cancer incidence
in England and Wales, various reproductive-related cancer studies and
a large cohort study on the health consequences of exposure to alpha-radiation.
Isabel
enjoys teaching. She organised the short course in Epidemiology and
Medical Statistics for several years. She has written a teaching textbook
on cancer epidemiology to be published by the International Agency for
Research on Cancer (WHO/IARC).
Peter
Smith
studied mathematics and statistics at City University, London. Since
1965 he has worked on epidemiological and statistical research in a
variety of institutions and places, including Medical Research Council
Units in London and Edinburgh, Makerere University Medical School in
Uganda, the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyons, France,
the Imperial Cancer Research Fund in Oxford, Harvard School of Public
Health in Boston, USA, and the Tropical Diseases Research Programme
of WHO in Geneva. He moved to LSHTM in 1979.
His
research interests include large-scale intervention studies against
tropical diseases, including vaccine trials. In recent years he has
been much involved in investigations of the link between Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in humans. He is Professor
of Tropical Epidemiology and Head of the department of Infectious and
Tropical Diseases.
Bianca
De Stavola
is Italian, and graduated in statistical sciences at the University
of Padua in 1979. She then came to England, where she obtained an MSc
in statistics at the London School of Economics and a PhD in statistics
at Imperial College, London. She joined LSHTM in 1994.
She
is involved in running the twin study of risk factors for the cancers
of the breast and testis and in the teaching programme for MSc and PhD
students, and is now enthusiastically involved in developing the material
for the distance-based Diploma and MSc in Epidemiology: Principles and
Practice.
Neil
Stoker
graduated in biological sciences at the University of Leicester,
and studied in the Department of Genetics at the same institution for
a PhD on the molecular genetics of cell wall biosynthesis in Escherichia
coli.
After
working as a postdoctoral fellow at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund,
looking at the genetics of collagen, he joined LSHTM as a lecturer in
1985. He is now Senior Lecturer in the Department of Infectious and
Tropical Diseases.
His
main research interests cover the molecular genetics of mycobacteria,
and include cell wall biosynthesis, and regulation of virulence genes
in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Bob
Sturrock
worked in the Tropics continuously from 1961-81, in Africa and the
West Indies. He joined LSHTM in 1973 and returned to the UK in 1981.
Now a senior member of staff based in the Infectious and Tropical Diseases
Department, and Course Organiser of the Distance Learning MSc/Diploma
in Infectious Diseases, his interests include all aspects of helminthology,
especially schistosomiasis epidemiology and control.
He
is also interested in certain intestinal nematodes of humans and cestodes.
Bob continues to make regular overseas visits to Africa, the Caribbean
and South America, spending between 8 and 10 weeks on two field trips
each year.
He
is currently involved in an INCO-DC (EU)–funded project in collaboration
with the Kenyan and Ugandan Ministries of Health, the University of
Cambridge and the Danish Bilharziasis Laboratories.
Geoffrey
Targett
is a medical parasitologist with a major interest in immunity to
parasites, especially malaria, and in field studies on parasite transmission
and intervention measures. He has experience in strategy development
at an international level for WHO and other agencies. He is also an
experienced teacher at both postgraduate and undergraduate level in
the UK and in other countries.
Anne
Tholen-Kennard
graduated in Mathematics at Exeter University and then qualified
as a nurse at St Thomas’ Hospital, London. She subsequently joined St
Bartholomew’s Hospital Medical College, where she was involved in work
on the epidemiology of congenital malformations and was responsible
for the development of the first antenatal serum screening service for
Down’s syndrome in the UK. In 1998, she obtained an MSc in Epidemiology
at Erasmus University, Rotterdam (The Netherlands). She joined LSHTM
in 1999. Her research interests include psycho-social aspects of antenatal
screening, ultrasound screening for congenital abnormalities and the
risks of maternal epilepsy.
Veronica
Tuffrey
graduated with a BA in Natural Sciences from Cambridge University
in 1983, and worked in oil exploration until coming to LSHTM in 1988
to study for the MSc in Public Health Nutrition. A research post at
LSHTM, with fieldwork in Nepal, led to a PhD.
Since
1994, she has worked as a consultant, undertaking overseas assignments
for UN agencies and an NGO. Her main research interest is in anthropometric
indicators of nutritional status and household welfare.
Gill
Walt
graduated from the London School of Economics and Political Science
and worked for three years in Mozambique, after independence. Her main
interest is in health policy. She has worked on policy issues in primary
health care – for example, editing a book on community health workers
(Community Health Workers in National Programmes: just another pair
of hands?).
Her
more recent research has explored the international policy environment,
looking at the links and relationships between international health
policy and national policy-making. She has worked in many countries
in southern Africa, and other parts of the world.
Jerry
Wheeler
is a lecturer in the Infectious Disease Epidemiology Unit of the
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Jerry has worked in
the School since 1989 as a statistician and epidemiologist. He was part
of a national general practice based study of infectious intestinal
disease in England from 1992-1996 and has since worked on several studies
of water quality and health.
His
research work in developing countries has also included studies of intestinal
disease as well as immuno-epidemiological studies of measles, tuberculosis
and malaria. Jerry is a Course Manager for the Epidemiology: Principles
and Practice course with Isabel DOS Santos Silva. He also teaches on
courses held within LSHTM and overseas in epidemiology and statistical
methods with a particular focus on multi-level modelling.
David
Wonderling
studied economics at the University of Sussex and has an MSc in
Health Economics from the University of York. He worked at the Health
Economics Research Group at Brunel University for two years before joining
LSHTM in 1996. His research includes evaluation of coronary prevention
programmes; comparison of methods for estimating cost-effectiveness
ratios, investigation of cancer service contracting.