National Research Foundation (NRF) board member Professor Glenda Gray has been inducted as a Fellow of the world’s oldest and one of its most prestigious academies of sciences – the UK’s Royal Society, reports Engineering News.
The society was founded in 1660 and its list of Fellows and foreign (that is, non-British and non-Commonwealth) members included virtually all, if not all, of the great scientists of the past 366 years.
Gray, who could now put the letters FRS after her name, was elected to the society last year, but formally joined it this week, when she (and other new Fellows) signed the Charter Book during the Admissions Day ceremony.
Gray is ranked as an A-rated scientist by the NRF. Her background is as a medical doctor and paediatrician, and she has become an internationally distinguished clinician-scientist.
Her ground-breaking research into HIV helped prevent the transmission of HIV-1 from mothers to infants, and also led to the development of HIV prevention for women through vaccinology and antiretroviral prophylaxis.
She has also extensively researched Covid-19 vaccines, and helped confirm the safety and effectiveness of Covid-19 jabs in South Africa.
In recognition of her pioneering work regarding the prevention of paediatric HIV, Gray has been awarded the Order of Mapungubwe and the Nelson Mandela Health and Human Rights Award. In acknowledgement of her research into HIV, she has also been featured as one of TIME Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World and of Forbes magazine’s Top 50 Women in Africa.
She has been awarded honorary Doctorates of Science by Stellenbosch University and by Canada’s Simon Fraser University, and an honorary Doctorate of Laws by Rhodes University.
Gray has held several prestigious appointments, which include Wits Distinguished Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Centre Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division Professor, in the US; international HIV Vaccine Trials Network Co-Principal Investor (an initiative funded by the US National Institutes of Health); and Lead for the Africa-focused HIV vaccine discovery and development BRILLIANT Consortium.
She is also a member of the Academy of Science of South Africa, the African Academy of Sciences, the World Academy of Sciences and the US National Academy of Medicine.
She is a member of the Council of the University of Cape Town, and Wits Infectious Disease and Oncology Research Institute Professor and director. Gray had been a previous President and CEO of the South African Medical Research Council.
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