Academic
leadership: LSHTM
The London
School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) is the University
of London's major resource for postgraduate teaching and
research in public health and tropical medicine, as well as the
leading postgraduate medical institution in these subjects in
Europe.
It has an
international standing with a staff that has unique
multidisciplinary and international experience.
This course has
been designed by staff within the Department of
Infectious & Tropical Diseases (ITD) which encompasses
all of the laboratory-based research in the School as well as
that on the clinical and epidemiological aspects of infectious
and tropical diseases. The range of disciplines represented in
the Department is very broad and interdisciplinary research is a
feature of much of its activity. The spectrum of diseases
studied is wide and there are major research groups focused on
malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted
diseases, vaccine development and evaluation, and vector biology
and disease control..
The
Course Director is Sara Atkinson, a lecturer within ITD.
She read Genetics at the University of St Andrews, Scotland.
After working at AIIMS, New Delhi on a project identifying the
genes involved in thalassaemia she joined LSHTM in 1987. Her PhD
focused on linkage studies of genes involved in the
susceptibility of infection to intracellular infections,
particularly tuberculosis and leprosy in Pakistan. After her
PhD, she continued her research at LSHTM on cellular aspects of
BCG immunology. Later she returned to her interest in leprosy
immunology and studied inflammatory cytokine expression in
leprosy patients in Hyderabad, India. More recently her
research work has involved microarray techniques for studying
differential gene expression within patients with leprosy
undergoing different drug treatments. Her teaching interests are
in immunology and intracellular infections. Sara was Deputy
Course Organiser of the distance learning Postgraduate
Diploma/MSc Infectious Diseases course in 2005-06, taking over
from John Ackers as Course Organiser in 2006-07.