Jeffrey Jon Shaw

Jeffrey Jon Shaw OBE, FLS, FASTMH (born 12 July 1938) is a British parasitologist who began working in Latin America in 1962. Although officially retired, he is presently Senior Professor at São Paulo University's Biomedical Sciences Institute where he continues his research in its Parasitology Department.

Jeffrey Shaw
Jeffrey Jon Shaw c.2019
Born(1938-07-12)12 July 1938
CitizenshipBritish
EducationDartford Technical School for Boys (now Wilmington Academy), Chislehurst and Sidcup Grammar School
Alma materLondon University
Occupationparasitologist
EmployerUniversidade de São Paulo
Awards
Websitehttp://lattes.cnpq.br/4665897914902853

Life

During World War II he was evacuated and spent his early childhood in the village of Rothley, Leicestershire whose surrounding countryside became his playground and fostered his love of nature. When the war ended, he returned to Kent, living there until he went to university in London. Since 1965 he has lived and worked in Brazil. Amongst his hobbies are a love of classical music and sailing He continues to sail and participate in championships. There is a yearly Snipe class trophy in his name at the Brasília Yacht club.

Career

He gained a BSc in Zoology in 1960 at London University's Queen Mary College (now Queen Mary University) of London and a PhD in 1964 at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine under the guidance of Percy Cyril Garnham and Cecil Hoare. The field work for his doctoral thesis on the life cycle of Endotrypaum was performed in Central America in 1962 with Wellcome Trust support.[1]

He contracted cutaneous leishmaniasis there; this motivated his lifelong interest in the disease. In the early 1960s, he and his colleague Alister Voller pioneered the use of indirect immunofluorescent techniques for the diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis and Chagas Disease. In 1977 he was awarded a DSc at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. In 1965 he and Ralph Lainson moved to Belém, Brazil where they founded the Wellcome Parasitology Unit. In 1994 he became a tenured senior professor at the University of São Paulo (USP) and has continued there until the present time.

His research focuses on different aspects of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), in particular the leishmaniases and Chagas disease. Within these areas he has worked on their taxonomy, diagnosis and epidemiology. Presently his research is focused on the application of molecular methods to these areas.

Honours and awards

Selected works

gollark: Interesting idea. I think use of the bee article as a word source *could* be good.
gollark: *All* shall be pinginated.
gollark: <@!160279332454006795> <@!734140198236979302> <@!332271551481118732> <@!293066066605768714>
gollark: QUERY to PEOPLE: should apiotelephone "numbers" be:- randomly assigned- deterministically assigned based on channel/guild- user-chosen somehowand- actual numbers- a few words- hexadecimal/base64 or something
gollark: --remind 2000m Test.

References

  1. Hall, A. R. and Bembridge, B. A. (1987). Physics and Philanthropy: A History of the Wellcome Trust 1936-1986. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. p. 239.

Notes

1.^ The Samuel Pessoa Award is the most prestigious award of the Brazilian Society of Protozoology and is awarded annually to a figure of great prominence in Protozoology. The Samuel Pessôa Prize is awarded during the Annual Meeting of the Society. The awardee automatically becomes an honorary member of the Brazilian Society of Protozoology.
2.^ The Carlos Chagas Scientific Merit Medal is the highest award of the Brazilian Society of Tropical Medicine, awarded annually since 2014 to a person who has had an exceptional scientific production in the area of Tropical Medicine while working in Brazil, who has played an important role in the training of human resources in Tropical Medicine (stricto sensu and lato sensu) and whose work has resulted in notable benefits to the academic community and the general population.
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