|
June Dalziel Almeida (5 October 1930 – 1 December 2007)〔(''The Times'' Published: 18 February 2008 )〕 was a Scottish virologist who, with little formal education, became a Doctor of Science and a pioneer in virus imaging, identification and diagnosis. ==Biography== June Dalziel Hart was born on 5 October 1930 at 10 Duntroon Street, Glasgow to Jane Dalziel (née Steven) and Harry Leonard Hart, a bus driver. She left school at 16 to work as a histopathology technician at Glasgow Royal Infirmary. She then moved to St Bartholomew's Hospital to continue her career. On 11 December 1954 she married Enriques Rosalio (Henry) Almeida (1913–1993), a Venezuelan artist with whom she had a daughter, Joyce. They moved to Canada where she worked at the Ontario Cancer Institute as an electronmicroscopist. Despite having few formal qualifications she was promoted in line with her abilities.〔 Publications credited her for her work on identifying viral structure. Her abilities were recognised by A. P. Waterson, then Professor of microbiology at St Thomas's Hospital Medical School who persuaded her to return to England to work at the hospital. She developed a method to better visualise viruses by using antibodies to aggregate them. She worked on hepatitis B and the cold virus.〔 Almeida produced the first images of the rubella virus. David Tyrrell and Almeida worked on characterising a new type of viruses now called coronaviruses. This family includes the SARS virus. Almeida followed Waterson to the Postgraduate Medical School in London where her contributions to articles were recognised by her award of a Doctorate. She finished her career at the Wellcome Institute.〔J. E. Banatvala, ‘Almeida , June Dalziel (1930–2007)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Jan 2011 (accessed 18 Oct 2012 )〕 While working for Wellcome she was named on several patents in the field of imaging viruses.〔(Almeida, June Dalziel ), patents, accessed October 2012〕 She left Wellcome and began to teach yoga but she returned in an advisory role in the late 1980s when she helped take novel pictures of the HIV virus.〔 She published ''Manual for rapid laboratory viral diagnosis'' in 1979.〔(WHO ''Manual for rapid laboratory viral diagnosis'' 1979 )〕 Almeida died in Bexhill from a heart attack in 2007.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「June Almeida」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|