Prof David Heymann CBE (Professor of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at LSHTM, and chair, WHO Strategic and Technical Advisory Group on Infectious Hazards, advising the Emergencies Programme on the COVID-19 response)
In 1976, after spending two years working in India on smallpox eradication, Prof Heymann was a member of the CDC (Atlanta) team to investigate the first Ebola outbreak in DRC. He remained in sub-Saharan Africa for 13 years in various field research positions on Ebola, monkeypox, Lassa Fever, malaria and other tropical diseases. From 1989 - 2009 he held various leadership positions in infectious diseases at WHO. In 2003 he headed the WHO global response to SARS as Executive Director of Communicable Diseases. He has published over 250 peer reviewed articles and book chapters, is editor of the Control of Communicable Diseases Manual, and is an elected member of the UK Academy of Medical Sciences and the US National Academy of Medicine.
He will explain briefly about some of his recent work, and then answer your questions – when you register, please remember to send them to us!
Watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker:Adam Wagner,Barrister, Doughty St Chambers / Specialist Advisor Joint Committee on Human Rights
Adam Wagner, a barrister at Doughty Street Chambers, is Specialist Advisor to the Joint Committee on Human Rights’ inquiry into Covid-19 and has worked throughout the pandemic to decode the laws for the general public.
During the Covid-19 pandemic the UK government has introduced over 200 new laws using emergency powers with little or no scrutiny from Parliament. This includes over 60 criminal laws criminalising everyday social contact and gatherings, which a court of appeal judge has called "possibly the most restrictive regime on the public life of persons and businesses ever”. Criticisms have included that the laws have been anti-democratic, inconsistent with guidance and too complex for people to understand. But in the circumstances of a public health crisis could anything have been done differently?
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Professor Alan Silman
Musculoskeletal Health, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences; Senior Research Fellow, Green Templeton College, Oxford University.
Prof Silman started his career in Epidemiology at the Royal London (with Prof Eva Alberman), worked as Director of the ARC Research unit in Manchester where he devoloped his interest in population genetics, and then was Director of Arthritis Research UK from 2006-14, after which he joined Oxford.
The topics Alan will cover include: • Are there Jewish genes and if so why? • How different are they between different groups of Jews across the world? • Why was the role of our Jewish mothers so important for Ashkenazi Jews? • Can we really go back as far as the Exodus?
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Dr Brooke Vandermolen
Obstetrics and Gynaecology Registrar, Barnet Hospital
Brooke Vandermolen studied medicine at University College London and is now specialising in obstetrics and gynaecology. She blogs about women’s health issues. She will speak about the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on women’s health, and about the innovative ways of communicating that are evolving in healthcare.
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Prof Eyal Leshem
Director, Institute for Travel and Tropical Medicine, Sheba Medical Centre; and Clinical Associate Professor, Tel Aviv University Medical School
Prof Eyal Leshem studied medicine at the Technion, and trained in medicine and infectious diseases at Sheba. After working in Nepal he trained as an EIS officer at the CDC, where he investigated multiple infectious diseases, including MERS, and then worked as a medical epidemiologist in the CDC viral gastroenteritis team, focussing on diarrheal diseases surveillance and rotavirus vaccine impact. He continues to participate in CDC surveillance, and is a consultant to the WHO, assessing vaccine preventable diseases in many countries. He continues to be involved in evaluating both HPV and rotavirus vaccines, and in studies of Dengue, Zika, malaria and travel associated infectious diseases. Recently he has played a leading role in the roll-out of the Covid-19 vaccine programme in Israel, and will talk about his experiences, and about the impact and effectiveness of the programme.
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Jason Strelitz, Director of Public Health, London Borough of Newham
Jason has worked for Newham Council as Director of Public Health since April 2019. He has worked in public health since 2009, having worked previously in social policy on issues of poverty and social exclusion. His PhD is from the LSE, and he has worked in both government and campaigning organisations. Jason lives in Finchley with his wife Mandy and kids Matti and Tami
In his talk he will: • tell the story of the Covid 19 pandemic through the lens of one particularly impacted place: the London Borough of Newham • reflect why and in what ways Newham has been affected - in particular how Covid has shone a spotlight on longstanding social and health inequalities • consider some of the immediate challenges and the lessons we are trying to learn for the future
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Prof Orly Manor, [Braun School of Public Health, Hebrew University (HU) and Hadassah; Chairwoman of the Israel National Institute for Health Policy Research (INIHPR)]
Prof Manor, former Director of the Braun School, studied statistics at the HU and did her PhD at Stockholm University. She developed the Israel National Program for Quality Indicators in Community Healthcare, and founded the Israel Longitudinal Mortality Studies. Her research interests include quality of care, health inequalities, the developmental origin of adult disease and methodological issues associated with longitudinal studies. She has received the HU Rector’s award for outstanding faculty member and has been visiting professor in many institutions including Stockholm University and Geneva University Hospital.
INIHPR is a framework for advancing health policy, promoting and funding research on health services, their quality, effectiveness and cost. It has created platforms for public discussion about decision-making processes in the health system encouraging interdisciplinary and international scientific cooperation. It is a distinctive neutral meeting ground where all actors - health management organizations (Kupot Cholim), hospitals, the Ministry of Health and academia - meet and discuss issues about health policy decisions and actions. Prof Manor will explain the role of INIHPR, and will illustrate some of its unique features using Covid19 challenges as examples.
You can view a recording of the event here.
Professor of Paediatric Immunology and Infectious Diseases,University of Southampton; Director of the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Southampton Clinical Research Facility; Clinical Director of the Wessex Local Clinical Research Network and a NIHR Senior Investigator.
Saul leads the NIHR Wessex COVID-19 vaccine programme and is UK CI and local PI for multiple COVID-19 vaccine trials in adults and children. During the COVID-19 pandemic Saul has also chaired the RECOVERY trial paediatric working group and been a member of the NIHR Urgent Public Health Group and NIHR vaccine trial chief investigator group.
In his talk Saul will explain the UK COVID-19 vaccine trial programme so far, and discuss key research questions that will be addressed by trials in the spring and summer 2021.
You can view a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Dr Beverley Jacobson (Chief Executive, Norwood)
Dr Jacobson is a medical doctor who became a management consultant before entering the world of charity and special needs. She graduated MB ChB from Witswatersrand University in 1990, and MBA from London Business School in 1994; worked for Monitor Company (1994- 1996); and was then CEO of Kisharon (2008-2018: , CEO Norwood 2018 to before took up her present position. In her talk she will tell us about her journey to Norwood and about the impact of Covid.
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Prof Sherry Glied, Ph.D., (Dean and Professor of Public Service, Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, New York University)
Sherry is an economist by training. Before she took up her current post she was professor of health policy and management at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health. She served as Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services during the Obama Administration. Earlier she was Senior Economist for health and labor market policy at the Council of Economic Advisers under Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Prof Glied’s main areas of research are health policy reform and mental health care policy. She is co-editor (with Peter C. Smith) of The Oxford Handbook of Health Economics, (OUP, 2011).
This talk will review the status of the US healthcare system before COVID and discuss what we've learned about how that system works and doesn't work through the pandemic experience.
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Danny Morris, Senior Research and Policy Analyst, Research Division, Community Security Trust (CST)
Danny works at the CST, an organisation that is probably known in principle to most attendees. Likewise, we are probably all aware that the Jewish community in general has faced antisemitic challenges recently, and this has spilled over into medical circles – including workplaces and medical schools. Difficult aspects of this include the lack of recognition that antisemitism is a form of racism, and the use of social media as a vehicle for it.
Danny will discuss the latest spike in antisemitism, the work CST has been doing to tackle it and offering advice and guidance on what to do if you find yourself subject to antisemitism. Danny will also explore some of the antisemitic themes and narratives that have developed in relation to the Coronavirus pandemic, as well as the subsequent vaccination programme. There will be a chance for questions and discussion at the end of the presentation.
You can view a recording of the webinar here.
Speaker: Prof Nadav Davidovitch
Director, School of Public Health; Vice Dean for Global Engagement and Research Collaboration, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University
Health and Equity in all Policies: Local, Regional and Global Perspectives on COVID19 Challenges in Israel
Prof Nadav Davidovitch studied philosophy and then medicine at Tel Aviv and specialised in epidemiology and public health physician. Previously he chaired the Department of Health Systems Management at Ben-Gurion and the Centre for Health Policy Research in the Negev. His research interests are health policy, public health, vaccination policy, one health/ecohealth, comparative healthcare systems, public health ethics, and global health. He serves on national and international committees, among them: Governing Board, European Public Health Association; Association of Schools of Public Health in the European Region (ASPHER) COVID-19 Task Force; and the Israel advisory committee for COVID-19. He has published over 160 papers in leading journals and many book chapters, coedited six volumes and books and published his work in leading medical and health policy journals. Since the outbreak of COVID-19 in Israel, he has been involved in research and the formulation of health policy and has advised agencies in Israel and abroad on the need to make structural changes in the health system, with an emphasis on social issues and addressing health gaps.
Global health threats including, epidemics and climate change, know no political borders. In his talk Prof Davidovitch will analyze the development of the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel and its interaction with social, economic and political determinants of health, and the role played by different sectors within Israeli society within and outside the medical system. In addition, he will present the need to move from vaccine nationalism to vaccine internationalism and the need to rethink global health governance.
Speaker: Dr Tamar Ashkenazi
Director of the Israeli National Transplant Centre.
Dr Ashkenazi is a registered nurse, and undertook her doctoral research at Tel Aviv University, presenting a thesis about adaption to loss. She has held her current position for 23 years.
She established the network of national transplant coordinators and dedicated ICU physicians in all Israeli hospitals; the ongoing process of quality control for organ donation; and developed unique process dedicated to accompanying and supporting families of organ donors. She moderates grief support groups for bereaved organ donor families and published a book - "Mourning – the day after", proposing a variety of practical ways to cope with various situations over time after donation - associated bereavement with combined input of parents, brothers and children who have experienced bereavement.
In her talk Dr Ashkenazi will introduce us to her remarkable work and also talk about how she has developed the Israeli live donation system which includes an international kidney pair programme between pairs who do not have a match.
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Speaker: Dr Toni Hazell, General Practitioner, Tottenham
Dr Toni Hazell qualified from St. Mary’s Hospital Medical School and did her Vocational Training at Northwick Park Hospital, where London President Ian Goodman was one of her trainers. She has a longstanding interest in women’s health and HIV, and is a member of the executive committee of the Primary Care Women’s Health Forum. She has an academic role in the RCGP as an eLearning fellow, in preparing CPD material, and as an appraiser. She is a member of the LMC for Haringey East. Toni believes strongly that GPs do not know a lot about HIV, and that holistic education about the subject is essential.
You can watch a recording of the event here.
Prof Barry Schoub spoke to the Association on Sunday 19th December 2021 on the subject of “The omicron variant – a South African perspective”
Watch a recording of the event here.
Barry David Schoub was born in Johannesburg and received his undergraduate MB BCh at University of the Witwatersrand, followed by postgraduate degrees MMed, MD, and DSc; FRC Path; FC Path (SA), FRSSAf and MASSAf (Elected member of the Academy of Science of South Africa). In 1977 he held a United States Public Health Service international postdoctoral fellowship and was the first recipient of the James Gear International Postdoctoral Fellowship. He was a Fogarty fellow at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, USA, until the latter part of 1978 when he was appointed as Professor and Head of the Department of Virology of the University of the Witwatersrand (at the age of 33). In 1982 he became the Director of the National Institute for Virology. In January 2002 he was appointed as founding Executive Director of the newly established National Institute for Communicable Diseases, retiring in August 2010.
He has been a member of a number of international bodies and has served as an advisor for several WHO programmes including polio, measles, RSV and influenza. He was a member of the Advisory Committee for Poliomyelitis Eradication [ACPE] of the World Health Organization and of the Board of the International Association of Public Health Institutes (IANPHI). He served on the Task Force for Immunization for WHO (AFRO) and was a member of the interim board of the International Society of Influenza and Respiratory Viruses.
He served as South Africa’s delegate to the International Union of Microbiological Societies, and was the founding Chairman of the National Advisory Group on Immunization of South Africa. He chaired the Scientific Advisory Panel and was vice-chairmen of the Board of Trustees of the Poliomyelitis Research Foundation. He served on the Scientific Advisory Committee of the South African AIDS Vaccine initiative, and was the International Scientific Advisory Committees of the 1990, 1996 and 1999 International Congresses of Virology and the 1996 and 1998 International AIDS Congresses. He has published over 290 scientific publications, 16 chapters in books and has written a book on HIV/AIDS, entitled “AIDS & HIV in Perspective”, published by Cambridge University Press now in its 2nd edition.
Amongst the awards he has received are the Paul Harris Fellowship Award of Rotary International; the Daubenton Prize of the University of the Witwatersrand – for the most outstanding Faculty Member of the year; the Order of Mapungubwe, the country’s highest honour, in recognition of invaluable contributions to medical science, virology and for services to the peoples of South Africa and internationally. He has life-time membership of the Federation of Infectious Diseases of Southern Africa in recognition of outstanding contribution to Virology, Public Health and Infectious diseases in South Africa and Internationally. In 2012 he received the Research Award of the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, also the African Society for Laboratory Medicine Lifetime Achievement Award in recogntion of exceptional contributions to laboratory science which has made a major impact on public health and laboratory medicine worldwide. In the Jewish community he received the Jewish Achievers Award in the category Science, Arts, Culture and Sports, the Jewish Achievers Humanitarian Award, and the Samson-Kaplan Community Service award. In 2021 he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Academy of Science of South Africa.