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Alimuddin Zumla

British-Zambian physician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alimuddin Zumla
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Sir Alimuddin Zumla (born 15 May 1955) is a British-Zambian professor of infectious diseases and international health at University College London Medical School, and a Consultant Infectious Diseases physician at UCLHospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.[12][13][14] He specialises in infectious and tropical diseases, clinical immunology, and internal medicine, with a special interest in HIV/AIDS, respiratory infections (including COVID-19 and Tuberculosis), pathogens with epidemic potential and diseases of poverty.[15][16] He is known for his leadership of infectious/tropical diseases research and capacity development activities.[17] He was awarded a Knighthood in the 2017 Queens Birthday Honours list for services to public health and protection from infectious disease.[18] In 2012, he was awarded Zambia's highest civilian honour, the Order of the Grand Commander of Distinguished services - First Division.[19] In 2024, for the seventh consecutive year, Zumla was recognised by Clarivate Analytics, Web of Science as one of the world's top 1% most cited researchers.[20][21][22][23][24][25][26] In 2021 Sir Zumla was elected as Fellow of The World Academy of Sciences.[27][28] In 2024, he was elected Member of the prestigious Academy of Europe (Academia Europaea).[29]

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Early life

Alimuddin "Ali" Zumla was born in Northern Rhodesia (now Chipata, Eastern Province, Zambia).[30] His parents Ismail and Aman Zumla were of Gujarati Indian origin.[31] He resided in the Kamwala district of Lusaka. He did his early education at the Lotus Primary School and Prince Philip Secondary School (now Kamwala Secondary School) in Lusaka, and his medical training at the University of Zambia's School of Medicine.[32] As a teenager, he declined a Rhodes Scholarship in order to pursue medical training in Zambia.[33]

In 1980, Zumla moved to London to pursue an MSc in tropical medicine at the University of London.[30] In 1982, he contracted life-threatening tuberculous meningitis, and was told that he would never walk again, but went on to recover and return to work a year and a half later despite disabling and painful neurological sequelae resulting from his meningitis.[33][34] He went on to pursue doctoral studies on leprosy human monoclonal antibodies at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, where his 1987 dissertation (advised by Keith McAdam) merited him the Alan Woodruff Medal.[30][35][36]

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Career

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Zumla spent a year at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine gaining the MSc degree in Clinical Tropical Diseases with a distinction and the Murgratroyd Prize. He subsequently worked at The Royal Northern and Royal Free Hospitals under the mentorship of David Geraint James obtaining his Membership of The Royal College of Physicians of London.[citation needed]

After doing a PhD between 1985 and 1987, Zumla worked as infectious diseases registrar and at the Rush Green Regional Hospital for Infectious Diseases in Romford under Ming Yong and Mervyn Medlock. Whilst working at Rush Green Hospital, he identified and notified the first cases of the 1988 Legionnaires' Diseases outbreak which he traced back to Broadcasting House, BBC, central London.[37]

Zumla subsequently spent four years in a senior registrar/honorary lecturer position at the Hammersmith Hospital, Royal Postgraduate Medical School in London under Sir Robert Lechler, and then two years at the University of Texas Center for Infectious Diseases working with Herbert DuPont.[30][35][38] He then returned to his native Zambia to work on AIDS-related opportunistic infections at the University Teaching Hospital in Lusaka before moving to University College London in 1994.[35]

In 2003, there were media reports about a paper of Zumla's in The Lancet discussing a new test developed by a team he led for monitoring CD4 immune cell counts based on dried blood samples.[39] Such counts are used in monitoring AIDS patients taking antiretroviral drug treatments; Zumla's subsequent work has led to development and evaluation of a range of rapid, cheap and more accessible diagnostic tests for TB and respiratory infections for use on patients in developing countries.[40][41]

Zumla was the guest editor of the Lancet TB Series which addressed key issues around TB treatment and diagnosis. The launch was held at the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Geneva on 18 May 2010.[42] As of 2011, Zumla is the director of the Centre for Infectious Diseases and International Health at University College London Medical School, as well as a consultant in infectious diseases at University College Hospital. His research interests include tuberculosis (particularly drug clinical trials, biomarkers, MDR-TB and TB in London), HIV/AIDS, tropical diseases, respiratory infections (and rapid diagnostics thereof), endocarditis, biomarkers, and transrenal DNA.[43]

Zumla's work focuses on improving global health, especially for disadvantaged populations, with an emphasis on assisting poorer and disadvantaged peoples of the world. He established and directs a multi-country collaboration with several African, Middle Eastern, European and United States institutions on collaborative research and training program on TB and HIV/AIDS.[17][9] Zumla and his collaborators have set up research and training programs in Africa, focusing attention on development of local infrastructure and capacity development.[44] Several of his doctoral students now occupy academic positions in institutions in Africa.[30]

Zumla has established north–south partnerships for TB research. His collaborations span five countries in Europe and 10 in sub-Saharan Africa, where he leads several multi-country research projects. His team's research findings have contributed to the development of WHO's management guidelines on treatment and prevention of TB and TB/HIV, and to improvements in the care of patients worldwide.[45]

In 2014, together with colleagues from Public Health England, World Health Organization, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and the Middle East, Zumla co-led The Lancet series on Mass Gatherings Medicine which was launched at the World Health Assembly of Ministers of Health in Geneva. This was a Series of reports about different mass gatherings: the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games; the 2012 European Football Championship finals, hosted jointly by Poland and Ukraine; and the 2012 and 2013 Hajj. These reports set out the planning and surveillance systems used to monitor public health risks, and describe the public health experiences and lessons learnt for the planning of future events.[46] In 2024 a study published in The Lancet co-led by Sir Zumla and Dr Brian McCloskey of Chatham House –involving an international group of public health experts from the UK, Japan, Switzerland and the US outlines how mass gathering events can be held safely even in the context of an infectious disease pandemic.[47]

Zumla played a lead role in defining the etiology, epidemiology, virology, pathogenesis, mode of transmission, diagnosis, management and infection control measures of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus.[48][49] His publications have emphasised the importance of development of new therapeutics and vaccines.[50][51]

Zumla has served on numerous international advisory groups. He was Member of Court of Governors of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (2007–2014), under the directorship of Sir Andrew Haines.[52] He was vice president of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (2003–2005).[53][54] He served as Vice Chair of the Strategic Advisory Group to the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership(2014–2016)[55]

On 7 April 2015, at an inaugural meeting in Cape Town, South Africa, Zumla and Markus Maeurer from Karolinska Institutet, Sweden led and established a new initiative, the Host-Directed Therapies Network (HDT-NET) consortium of 64 global partners to tackle global infectious diseases threats of multi-drug resistant TB and antimicrobial resistance.[56]

In 2020, Zumla was cited as a leading expert on the COVID-19 pandemic.[16][57]

In 2021 Zumla was elected as Fellow of The World Academy of Sciences whose principal aim is to promote scientific capacity and excellence for sustainable development in developing countries.[27][28]

In 2022 Zumla was profiled in the Lancet.[58] On 12 October 2022, the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene awarded Zumla the Sir Patrick Manson Medal, their highest mark of distinction. Zumla is the first ethnic minority recipient of this award since its conception in 1923.[59][60]

In 2024, together with colleagues from UK-Health security Agency, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, WHO  and other global ONE-HEALTH investigators, Zumla co-led The Lancet Series on One Health and Global Health Security. This was a four-paper series exploring the adoption of One Health approaches to improve health security and include an analysis of the current landscape of preventive, surveillance, and response measures in outbreak situations of emerging and re-emerging zoonotic infectious diseases with epidemic potential, antimicrobial resistance, environmental and chemical hazards and natural disasters.[61] On November 26 Zumla was awarded the Long Service Lifetime Achievement award by the UCLHospitals NHS Fiundation Trust.[25]

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Awards

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Quotes

"Everyone should hold hands together and move forward in the fight against killer infectious diseases"

Selected works

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Zumla has authored more than 700 publications and edited/published 21 medical textbooks, three of which are globally acknowledged classics: Manson's Tropical Diseases 21st and 22nd editions, Tuberculosis: A Comprehensive Clinical Reference which involves 156 global TB experts writing 104 chapters on all aspects of paediatric and adult TB, and Granulomatous Disorders co-edited with D. G. James.[78]

Books

  • Zumla Alimuddin and Abubakar Ibrahim (Senior Editors).  Editors: Miriam Orcutt, Clare Shortall, Sarah Walpole, Aula Abbara, Sylvia Garry , Rita Issa (2022). CLINICAL HANDBOOK OF REFUGEE HEALTH (2021) ISBN 9781138612884. Nov, 2021 CRC Press Taylor and Francis
  • Stefan HE Kaufmann, Eric Rubin, and Alimuddin  Zumla. PERSPECTIVES IN MEDICINE (2015) Publisher: Cold Spring Harbour Press, USA. ISBN 978-1621820734
  • Zumla Alimuddin and Hui David. (2019).  EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES.   Hardcover ISBN 9780323708456 eBook ISBN 9780323708463. Elsevier Saunders, New York.
  • Zumla, Alimuddin; Behrens, Ronald H.; Memish, Ziad A. (2012), Travel Medicine, An Issue of Infectious Disease Clinics (1st ed.), Philadelphia, PA: Saunders, ISBN 9781455748983, OCLC 815361562
  • Zumla Alimuddin and Keiser Jennifer (Editors). TROPICAL DISEASES (2012) Publishers: Elsevier Saunders publishers, New York. ISBN 978-1-4557-3880-9.
  • Zumla Alimuddin, Yew WWing-Wai and Hui David (2011).  EMERGING RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS IN THE 21ST CENTURY. (2011). Publishers: Elsevier Saunders publishers, New York. ISBN 1437724604.
  • Zumla Alimuddin, and Schaaf Simon. Clinics in Chest Medicine. TUBERCULOSIS. (2011). ( ISBN 9781437718041). Publisher: Elsevier publishers, London, New York.
  • Schaaf, H. Simon; Zumla, Alimuddin, eds. (2009), Tuberculosis: a comprehensive clinical reference, Saunders/Elsevier, ISBN 978-1-4160-3988-4
  • Zumla, Alimuddin; Schaaf, H. Simon (2009), Tuberculosis: An Issue of Clinics in Chest Medicine, Elsevier – Health Sciences Division, ISBN 978-1-4377-1804-1
  • Cook, Gordon C; Zumla, Alimuddin, eds. (2008), Manson's Tropical Diseases (22nd ed.), London: Elsevier Harcourt Brace Publishing Group, ISBN 978-1-4160-4470-3
  • Gandy Matthew and Zumla Alimuddin. (2003). THE RETURN OF THE WHITE PLAGUE: GLOBAL POVERTY AND THE NEW TUBERCULOSIS.  Publishers: Verso Books, London: (20 chapters with  49 international authors). ISBN 978-1859846698  
  • Cook GC and Zumla A. Editors: (2003) MANSON'S TROPICAL DISEASES, 21st edition. Harcourt Brace Saunders Publishing Group, London ISBN 0702026409.  
  • James D Geraint and Zumla Alimuddin. (1999) GRANULOMATOUS DISORDERS Publishers: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. (1999). ISBN 978-0521592215
  • Zumla, Alimuddin; Johnson, Margaret A.; Miller, Robert (1997), AIDS and respiratory medicine, Chapman & Hall Medical, ISBN 978-0-412-60140-8

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References

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