Scott Halperin

Scott Halperin is a Canadian immunologist, professor of pediatrics, microbiology, and immunology at Dalhousie University, the head of Pediatric Infection Diseases at IWK Health Centre, and the director of the Canadian Centre for Vaccinology.[1][2][3]

Biography

Halperin received a B.Sc. from Stanford University, and an M.D. from Cornell University. He did his postdoctoral research in pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Virginia and University of Minnesota.[4]

Career

Halperin's research focuses on pertussis and other vaccine-preventable diseases.[2] In 2020, the Canadian Centre for Vaccinology at Dalhousie University was approved by Health Canada to begin clinical trial for a potential COVID-19 vaccine, led by Halperin.[5] Halperin's research also focuses on public health policy in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic.[6]

Awards

From 2004 to 2009, Halperin held the CIHR/Wyeth Pharmaceuticals clinical research chair in vaccines. He received a certificate of merit from the Canadian Paediatric Society in 2009, as well as the Max Forman Senior Research Prize from the Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation, also in 2009.[4]

gollark: Also, micropython doesn't have them.
gollark: Yes, but there's no "language spec" with those as far as I know. I mean, there's probably a PEP somewhere for them.
gollark: It's inconsistent, only has old not very good libraries, often requires third-party libraries to be remotely usable (HTTP, datetimes) and is vastly bloated.
gollark: Python's standard library is big but mostly just really bad.
gollark: But not ones for the entire stdlib. Java *might*, Python almost certainly doesn't because it has so many random bad modules.

References

  1. "COVID‑19 researcher profile: Dr. Scott Halperin". Dalhousie News. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  2. "» Dr. Scott Halperin". Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  3. Press, Canadian. "Health Canada approves first clinical trial for potential COVID-19 vaccine". rdnewsnow.com. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  4. "Scott Halperin". Dalhousie University. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  5. Press, Keith Doucette, The Canadian (17 May 2020). "Halifax lab to do COVID-19 vaccine trials". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  6. Cooke, Alex (9 March 2020). "Dalhousie researchers get $1.9M to study coronavirus". CBC. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
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