List of Fellows of the Royal Society (Health and Human Sciences)

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This page lists Fellows of the Royal Society in Health and Human Sciences. [1]

Contents

Clinical Endocrinology

NameYear electedInstitution
Stafford Lightman 2017Henry Wellcome Laboratories
Daniel J. Drucker 2015Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital
Rajesh Thakker 2014
Andrew Hattersley 2010
Michel Chrétien 2009
Graham Russell 2008The Botnar Research Centre
Stephen O'Rahilly 2003
Peter Gluckman 2001

Clinical Epidemiology

NameYear ElectedInstitution
Richard Houlston 2017
Jack Cuzick 2016Queen Mary University of London
Rory Collins 2015Nuffield Department of Population Health
Christopher Dye 2012World Health Organization
Valerie Beral 2006
Nicholas Wald 2004
Gordon Conway 2004
Brian Greenwood 1998
Tom Meade 1996
Martin Vessey 1991

Clinical Pathology

NameYear electedInstitution
Richard Houlston [2] 2017
David C. Rubinsztein 2017
Patrick Vallance 2017GlaxoSmithKline
Andrew Wilkie 2013Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford
Peter Isaacson 2009University College London
Jack Martin 2000University of Melbourne
George Poste 1997

Clinical Pharmacology

NameYear electedInstitution
Patrick Vallance 2017GlaxoSmithKline
Paul Workman 2016Institute of Cancer Research
Garret FitzGerald 2012
Graham Russell 2008The Botnar Research Centre
Peter Barnes 2007
Nicholas White 2006Mahidol University
Trevor Robbins 2005University of Cambridge
Roderick Flower 2003
Geoffrey Burnstock 1986

Clinical Physiology

NameYear electedInstitution
Rajesh Thakker 2014
Andrew Hattersley 2010
Nicholas White 2006Mahidol University
Hugh Bostock 2001

Related Research Articles

Fellow of the Royal Society Elected Fellow of the Royal Society, including Honorary, Foreign and Royal Fellows

Fellowship of the Royal Society is an award granted to individuals that the Royal Society of London judges to have made a 'substantial contribution to the improvement of natural knowledge, including mathematics, engineering science and medical science'.

Kay Davies British geneticist and anatomist; educator

Dame Kay Elizabeth Davies, is a British geneticist. She is Dr Lee's Professor of Anatomy at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford. She is director of the Medical Research Council (MRC) functional genetics unit, a governor of the Wellcome Trust, a director of the Oxford Centre for Gene Function, and a patron and Senior Member of Oxford University Scientific Society. Her research group has an international reputation for work on Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). In the 1980s, she developed a test which allowed for the screening of foetuses whose mothers have a high risk of carrying DMD.

Dolph Schluter is a professor of Evolutionary Biology and a Canada Research Chair in the Department of Zoology at the University of British Columbia. Schluter is a major researcher in adaptive radiations leading to speciation in extant species and currently studies speciation in the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus.


William Bradshaw Amos is a British biologist, Emeritus Scientist at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB). He led a team that developed the mesolens, a microscope with a giant lens.

Michael Norman Royston Ashfold FRS is a British chemist and Professor of Physical Chemistry at University of Bristol. He is a 2011 Royal Society Leverhulme Trust Senior Research Fellow.

Kenneth Burton FRS was a British biochemist, and Professor at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He was educated at High Pavement Grammar School (Nottingham), Wath Grammar School and King's College, Cambridge. When elected a Fellow of the Royal Society he was described as 'Distinguished for his contributions to knowledge of DNA structure and the mechanism of synthesis of bacteriophage nucleic acids.'

John Bourke Dainton FRS is a British physicist, and Sir James Chadwick Professor of Physics, at University of Liverpool. Dainton was awarded the Max Born Prize in 1999.

Jeffrey Graham (Jeff) Ellis is an Australian plant scientist, and Program Leader at CSIRO Plant Industry.

The Royal Society University Research Fellowship (URF) is a research fellowship awarded to outstanding early career scientists in the United Kingdom who are judged by the Royal Society to have the potential to become leaders in their field. The research fellowship funds all areas of research in natural science including life sciences, physical sciences and engineering, but excluding clinical medicine.

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