This is a list of London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine people, including former students and members of faculty.
Notable alumni
editNotable alumni of the School include:
- Hutton Ayikwei Addy
- Abraham Manie Adelstein
- Tedros Adhanom, Director-General of the World Health Organisation
- Dlawer Ala'Aldeen
- Pedro L. Alonso
- Anne Alvik
- John Ashton
- Sir Bhagvat Singh Ruler of Gondal India
- Nils Bejerot
- Gilbert Bukenya
- Colin Butler
- Sarah Cleaveland[1]
- Matilda J. Clerk
- Archie Cochrane
- Cheryl Cohen
- Alejandro Cravioto
- John Crump
- Sarah Darby
- Jocelyn DeJong
- Helen Epstein
- Carissa F. Etienne
- Philip James Edwards
- Marie-Claire Faray, women's rights activist
- Josep Figueras
- John Frank
- Innocent Gangaidzo
- Alan Powell Goffe
- Brendon Gooneratne
- Habibollah Hedayat
- Janet Hemingway, parasitologist, Professor of Insect Molecular Biology and Director of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
- David L. Heymann
- Robert Holdstock
- Harry Hoogstraal
- Kay-Tee Khaw, Professor of Clinical Gerontology at the University of Cambridge
- Honoria Somerville Keer
- Maria Van Kerkhove
- Vanessa Kerry
- Philip J. Landrigan
- James Lovelock
- Robert W. McCollum
- Carlos Monge Medrano
- J. Donald Millar
- Eduardo Missoni
- Matshidiso Moeti
- Mosa Moshabela
- Jim van Os
- Muhammad Ali Pate
- Elizabeth Pisani
- Samantha Nutt
- Max Price
- Pamela Rendi-Wagner
- Nesta Rugumayo
- Eli Schwartz
- Fernando Simón
- V. Sivalingam
- Ahmad Teebi (DHCG 1983)
- Anders Tegnell
- Gertrud Theiler
- Max Theiler
- Nahid Toubia
- Diana Walford
- Kenneth S. Warren
- Simon Wessely
- Franklin White
- Chris Whitty
- Alimuddin Zumla
Notable current and former academic staff
edit- Donald Acheson
- Abraham Manie Adelstein
- Elizabeth Anionwu
- Peter Armitage
- Andrew Balfour
- Kazem Behbehani
- Val Beral
- Claire Bertschinger
- Beulah Bewley
- William Brass (demographer)
- James Cantlie
- Geoffrey Douglas Hale Carpenter
- Sandy Cairncross
- Aldo Castellani
- Havelock Charles
- David Clayton
- Liz Corbett
- Val Curtis
- Hazel Dockrell
- Christopher Dye
- David Evans
- Richard Feachem
- Neil Hamilton Fairley
- David Flavell
- John Fox
- Clare Gilbert
- Ben Goldacre
- Brian Greenwood
- Major Greenwood
- Emily Grundy
- Andrew Haines
- Michael Healy
- Austin Bradford Hill
- Joseph Oscar Irwin
- Wilson Jameson
- Robert Leiper
- George Carmichael Low
- Patrick Manson
- Michael Marmot
- Carl R. May
- Archibald McIndoe
- Martin McKee
- Tony McMichael
- Anne Mills
- David Morley
- Jerry Morris
- David Nabarro
- S. Jay Olshansky
- Vikram Patel
- Julian Peto
- Peter Pharoah
- Peter Piot
- Stuart Pocock
- Anne Marie Rafferty
- Geoffrey Rose
- John Alexander Sinton
- Peter Smith
- Fiona Stanley
- Broughton Waddy
- Charlotte Watts
- Chris Whitty
- Vincent Wigglesworth
- John "Jack" P. Woodall
Deans and directors
edit- Sir Francis Lovell Dean of London School of Tropical Medicine from 1903 to 1916
- Sir Havelock Charles Dean of the London School of Tropical Medicine 1916 to 1924
- Sir Andrew Balfour Director from 1923 to 1931
- Wilson Jameson from 1931 to 1940
- 1939 to 1945 – Successive changes of Dean because of wartime commitments of Wilson Jameson and Brigadier Parkinson
- J. M. Mackintosh from January 1945 to 1950
- Andrew Topping from 1950 to 1955
- Austin Bradford Hill from 1955 to 1957
- James Kilpatrick from 1957 to 1960
- E. T. C. Spooner from 1960 to 1970
- C. E. Gordon Smith from 1970 to 1989
- Richard Feachem from 1989 to 1995
- B. S. Drasar Acting during 1995
- Harrison Spencer from 1996 to 2000
- Geoffrey Targett Acting during 2000
- Sir Andrew Haines from 2001 to 2010
- Peter Piot from 2010
Ref[2]
References
edit- ^ "Prof Sarah Cleaveland". Southern African Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
- ^ "Chronology of the London School". London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Archived from the original on 24 February 2014. Retrieved 7 August 2016.