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Blizard academic awarded for Outstanding Contribution to Health

Professor Dame Parveen Kumar DBE from the Centre for Immunobiology at the Blizard Institute, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, has received the BMJ Award for Outstanding Contribution to Health.

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Professor Dame Parveen Kumar DBE

Professor Dame Parveen Kumar DBE

The awards ceremony took place on Wednesday evening at the Park Plaza Hotel, London.

Professor Kumar is a Consultant Gastroenterologist and Professor of Medicine and Education. Her research interests have been in disorders of the small bowel particularly coeliac disease in which she completed her MD and published widely on the topic.

Her interests turned to education and she now teaches, lectures and examines for MBBS and postgraduate degrees in the UK and abroad on a regular basis. She developed the first MSc in Gastroenterology in the UK.

‘My patients have taught me so much about life’

As a medical student at Barts, she said she found textbooks rather boring and therefore went on to co-found and co-edit the textbook “Kumar and Clark’s Clinical Medicine” (currently in its ninth Edition). The book is well-known around the world for its advancements in the medical training and education of students, doctors and nurses.

On receiving the award, Professor Kumar said: “I am extremely humbled and totally overwhelmed by this BMJ award. The award should really go to all those who have helped me do what I love to do - medicine. These include my teachers, colleagues in the NHS and medical school, students and, above all, my patients who have taught me so much about life.

“The greatest reward for me have been the words 'thank you' as the patient leaves my room. Medicine has been such fun and a great joy.”

Services to medical education

Professor Kumar has many other notable achievements and is currently the President of the Royal Medical Benevolent Fund which helps to support doctors, medical students and their families.

In the past, she has been President of the British Medical Association, President of the Royal Society of Medicine, President of Medical Women's Federation, and academic vice president of the Royal College of Physicians. She was the Chair of the Medicines Commission UK and a founding non-executive Director of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).

In 2017, she was awarded Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List for services to medicine and medical education.

More information

 

For media information, contact:

Joel Winston
Public Relations Manager
Queen Mary University of London
email: j.winston@qmul.ac.uk

 

 

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