Robert Killick-Kendrick Explained

Robert Killick-Kendrick
Birth Date:20 June 1929
Birth Place:Hampton, United Kingdom
Death Place:Ganges, France
Nationality:British, French
Fields:Parasitology
Doctoral Students:María Dora Feliciangeli
Awards:Sir Rickard Christophers Medal from the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (1991)

Robert Killick-Kendrick (20 June 1929  - 22 October 2011) was a British parasitologist[1] with interests in the vectors of infectious diseases, in particular phlebotomine sandflies. His work on malaria, trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis and other parasitological infections are numerous and diverse. He published more than 300 articles and scientific contributions.

Education

Career

Killick-Kendrick was born in Hampton, Middlesex, and educated at Woking Grammar School. He left at 16, worked for a year in the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries in Weybridge, then spent two years in the Royal Army Medical Corps.[2]

In 1949, he started his career in research as a laboratory assistant at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. From 1955 he worked for eight years in Nigeria investigating trypanosome infections in humans as well as cattle.[3] He once trekked 415 miles (664 km) over 28 days, accompanied by a colleague and 28 cattle, to determine where the cattle became infected with trypanosomes. He returned to the London School in 1963 to continue research on malaria parasites with Cyril Garnham and others. After Garnham's retirement in 1968, he followed him to Imperial College London, where their work on malaria continued.

In 1972, he began investigating leishmaniasis and its vectors sandflies.[4] [5] For several years he lived in Cévennes.

In 1988, Killick-Kendrick was named as a member of the World Health Organization Expert Committee on Leishmaniasis where he was involved in the creation of the 1990 Technical Report Series on the Control of Leishmaniasis, as well as contributed to the 2010 Expert Committee meeting on leishmaniasis.[6]

Honours

For his contributions to tropical medicine, Dr Killick-Kendrick received:

Public engagements

Killick-Kendrick acted as the narrator for a series of videos produced by Scalibor entitled "What's biting my dog?" to explain which parasites affect dogs, and how this can be prevented.[8]

See also

References

  1. Rioux. J.A.. Landau. I.. Houin. R.. Robert Killick-Kendrick (1929-2011). Parasite. 19. 3. 2012. 290–292. 1252-607X. 10.1051/parasite/2012193290. 5394826. 23019663.
  2. News: Robert Killick-Kendrick Obituary. London . The Guardian. Ralph. Lainson. John. Baker. 23 December 2011.
  3. Web site: In memoriam, Professor Robert Killick-Kendrick 1929–2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304050918/http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/memoriam_robert_killic-kendrick/en/. dead. March 4, 2016. World Health Organization.
  4. Web site: About the narrator: Dr KIllick-Kendrick.
  5. Lawyer. Phillip. Killick-Kendrick. Mireille. Rowland. Tobin. Rowton. Edgar. Volf. Petr. Laboratory colonization and mass rearing of phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera, Psychodidae). Parasite. 24. 2017. 42. 10.1051/parasite/2017041. 5687099. 29139377.
  6. Web site: In memoriam, Professor Robert Killick-Kendrick 1929–2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304050918/http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/memoriam_robert_killic-kendrick/en/. dead. March 4, 2016. World Health Organization.
  7. Web site: List of past medal holders. RSTMH. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110910123308/http://www.rstmh.org/awards/medals/list-past-medal-holders#Christophers. 2011-09-10.
  8. Web site: "What's biting my dog?" Scalibor.