Annelies Wilder-Smith

Annelies Wilder-Smith is a professor of infectious diseases research at the Lee Kong Chian School of medicine. She is a world-renowned expert in travel and Tropical medicine. She is the president of the International Society of Travel medicine (ISTM). She was the former president of the Asia Pacific Society of Travel medicine and she was also the former chair of the Regional ISTM Conference in Singapore.[4]

Dr Annelies Wilder-Smith
EducationDoctor of Medicine, University Heidelberg, 1987. Master in Public Health, University Heidelberg, 2002. Doctor of Philosophy, University Heidelberg, 2003
OccupationProfessor of Emerging Infectious Diseases, epidemiologist, Educator[1]
Notable work
co-editor of the annual revisions of WHO’s “International Travel and Health”, “Manual of Travel Medicine & Health”, “Travel Medicine: tales behind the science” [2]
Spouse(s)Einar Wilder-Smith, January 5, 1991
AwardsMyrone Levine Vaccinology Prize, Honor Award for exemplary leadership and coordination in determining and communicating global yellow fever at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Award Ceremony, Mercator Professorship award by the German Research Foundation, Ashdown Oration Award by the Australian College of Travel Medicine [3]

Wilder-Smith's research interests are travel health, vaccine-preventable and emerging infectious diseases, such as Zika, Yellow Fever, Chikungunya, Influenza and Meningococcal disease.[4]

Education

Wilder-Smith obtained her MD from the University of Heidelberg, Germany, in 1987. She then received her master's degree in international health from the Curtin University in Australia, and her PhD from the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, in 2003.[5][6]

Accomplishments

Wilder-Smith has published more than 190 scientific papers, edited and co-edited textbooks and travel medicine books like Manual of Travel Medicine & Health, Travel Medicine: tales behind the science, How to take a medical history in Chinese.

Career

Wilder-Smith is the president of the International Society of Travel Medicine (ISTM). She was the former president of the Asia Pacific Society of Travel Medicine, and she was also the former chair of the Regional ISTM Conference in Singapore.[4]

She was Head of the Travellers' Health & Vaccination Center, Singapore, since 2000. She was an editorial consultant at The Lancet since 2004. She was also the chairman of Southeast Asia Research Committee, Leprosy Mission, Singapore, since 2004.

Since 2006, she is the co-editor of the annual revisions of the WHO's "International Travel and Health".[5]

As of 2020, she is serving as the professor of emerging infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.[4]

gollark: Some technologies lead more easily to harm than others.
gollark: That sounds like another thing which is bound to have no negative consequences.
gollark: I don't have those. I just do computers. Besides, bioweapons could affect other people.
gollark: I would recommend against entering the field of bioweapon design.
gollark: I'm pretty sure lots of viruses cover themselves (partly) in marker proteins from human cells, so it's harder to deal with them.

References

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