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Brighton and Sussex Medical School first inaugural lecture

09.06.2004

Read the introductory speech by Professor Sir David Watson.

On 17 June 2004 BSMS Dean, Professor Jonathan Cohen, will present his research entitled 'Septic Shock: Patients as their own worst enemy' in the first of the Medical School’s series of inaugural lectures.

Before taking up post at the School in February 2002, Professor Cohen, was head of the Department of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology at Imperial College, London for nine years.

He has an international reputation in infectious diseases, particularly in his work on sepsis and septic shock. He is editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Infectious Diseases and is regularly invited to give keynote lectures at major international institutions and conferences.

Prof Cohen is also an advisor to the Department of Health and other national organisations, such as the Meningitis Trust. He served on the Chief Medical Officer's review group on communicable diseases strategy and is a member of the Department of Health's Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, as well as other Department advisory bodies.

Septic Shock:
patients as their own worst enemy
Ancient Chinese characters represent: hot fever or heat disease

Septic shock is a condition that occurs when a very severe infection sets up an abnormally vigorous host response. The result is damage to many cells and tissues, and ultimately many of the key organs in the body start to fail. This is not about “antibiotic resistant” bacteria: the problem here is all about the host and how it responds to the infection. And why is it that we all don’t get septic shock when we get a nasty infection? Are there genetic factors which make some of us more susceptible to this problem than others?

Professor Cohen’s research analyses these concerns, “Why and how people die from severe infections, and what we can do to prevent and/or treat them, have been at the core of my interest in infectious diseases. In this lecture I will discuss the challenges we face in trying to understand how the host immune system responds to infection, and how we might be able to subvert it to help us develop new treatments.”

The lecture will be held at the new BSMS building on the University of Sussex, Falmer campus on 17 June at 6.30pm. To attend this event, e-mail

BSMS inaugural lectures will take place once per term and feature research presentations by each professor. The next in the series is scheduled for 27 October 2004 by Professor Di Watt.

 

Notes to editors
  • BSMS plays a key part in the Government’s strategy of increasing the number of qualified doctors from the UK working in the NHS.
  • It is the first undergraduate medical school in the south-east region outside of London.
  • The first 135 students enrolled in October 2003 for the five-year programme.
  • The school prides itself on providing modern practice-focused, science-based teaching. To complement this, latest I.T. facilities make lectures interactive and cutting edge.
  • BSMS works hard to create committed and compassionate practitioners with high quality interpersonal skills, as well as ethical standards for professional practice, grounded in multi-professional, team-focused work.

For further information contact Press Officer Emma Kearney on 020 7761 1788

 

 

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