New for our Society, the International Immunocompromised Host Society has awarded, for the first time, a Lifetime Achievement award, a Young Investigator award and the ICHS Society Citation award to three highly qualified ICHS members. The awards were presented during the closing ceremony of the 20th ICHS Symposium on Tuesday, 19 June, 2018.
Congratulations to the recipients!
The International Immunocompromised Host Society Lifetime Achievement AwardDr. Thomas J Walsh, Recipient of the First ICHS Lifetime Achievement Award
The International Immunocompromised Host Society Young Investigator AwardDr. Michail Lionakis, recipient of the First ICHS Junior Investigator Award
The International Immunocompromised Host Society Citation AwardDr. Paul Quie, Recipient of the First ICHS Citation Award Dr Paul Quie was born in Dennison, MN on February 3, 1925. He received his BA from St. Olaf College in 1949 and his MD from Yale Medical School in 1953. He did his internship at Minneapolis General Hospital (1953-54) and his residency in Pediatrics at the University of Minnesota University Hospitals (1954).From 1955-57, he served as a medical officer in the US Navy. In 1957. He returned to the UMN as a research fellow and as Chief Resident in Pediatrics. He served on the faculty of the Department of Pediatrics from 1958-1999 and was Chief of Staff at the University Hospitals from 1979-1984. From 1962-64, he was a guest investigator at the Rockefeller Institute in the laboratory of James G. Hirsch. He became the first director of the Biomedical Ethics Center in 1985. Dr. Quie headed the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases for many years and from 1998 through 2014, Co-Directed with Dr. Phillip Peterson, the International Medical Education and Research Program of the Medical School. He is currently Regents’ Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics and Distinguished International Professor. Dr Quie was both a founding member and the first president of ICHS. He was a staunch supporter of the Society all through the years. Dr Quie has been a pioneer in neutrophil biology. His work has laid the groundwork for our current knowledge of the mechanisms involved in chronic granulomatous disease and other neutrophil dysfunction syndromes in children and adults. He was a first-class scientist, funded almost continuously by the NIH. He has over 500 peer-reviewed publications and 200 book chapters and reviews, and was the editor of 5 textbooks. His career as notable physician-scientist and leader has impacted and inspired numerous scholars in the field of pediatrics and infectious diseases. Dr Quie is the recipient of numerous awards and honors that exemplify the deep respect which he is held among his contemporaries. As an example, he received both the IDSA Bristol Award and the IDSA Maxwell Finland Award and served as President of the IDSA. He was also President of the American Pediatric Society and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine. He was awarded a University of Minnesota Regents’ Professorship in Pediatrics in 1991, the most prestigious professorship in University of Minnesota. ICHS is both delighted and honored to give the First ICHS Citation Award to Dr. Paul Quie, one of the early giants and pillars of our Society. |