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Robert Winston
Robert Winston is Professor of Fertility Studies at Imperial College, London University, and Director of NHS Research and Development for Hammersmith Hospital, one of the UK¹s leading medical research centres. He is also Chancellor of Sheffield Hallam University. As a peer he takes the Government Whip (Lord Winston of Hammersmith since 1995) and speaks regularly in the House of Lords on education, science, medicine and the arts. He was the recent Chairman of the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology and is a board member of the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology. He is Chancellor elect of Sheffield Hallam University. Robert Winston is regular BBC presenter. Series include ‘Your Life in Their Hands’ (five series), ‘Making Babies’, ‘The Human Body’ (three BAFTAs and a Peabody award), ‘Secret Life of Twins’, ‘The Superhuman’ (October 2000 ¬ Wellcome Award for Medicine and Biology), ‘Child of our Time’, and ‘Threads of Life’ His most recent programme ‘Human Instinct’ has just been shown on BBC 1. He has also written the accompanying book, which was recently published by Transworld.
His Queen Charlotte’s Appeal recently raised over £13 million to build and equip the most advanced reproductive research centre in Europe, with space for 130 scientists and doctors working to improve the health of women and babies.
His contributions to clinical medicine include the development of gynaecological microsurgery in the 1970s and his team has established various improvements in reproductive medicine, subsequently adopted internationally, particularly in the field of endocrinology, IVF and reproductive genetics.
His group’s research enabled families with a history of a particular genetic disease to have children free of fatal illnesses. Their achievements include the development of techniques to help families who have problems associated with gender (such as haemophilia and muscular dystrophy), single gene defects (such as cystic fibrosis) and chromosomal abnormalities. The team is now, amongst other things, developing methods for maturing eggs outside the body, a technique that will make IVF very much cheaper and more accessible and far less an intrusive procedure for would-be parents.
His awards include a Wellcome Senior Research Fellowship 1973-77, a Blair-Bell Lectureship RCOG, 1978, the Cedric Carter Medal, Clinical Genetics Society, 1993, the Victor Bonney Medal for contributions to surgery, Royal College of Surgeons, 1993 and an Honorary Fellowship from Queen Mary and Westfield College. He has been a visiting professor at a number of overseas universities and is an honorary fellow of various learned societies overseas. He was Gold Medallist for the Royal Society of Health in 1998 and received the BMA Gold Award for Medicine in the Media in 1999 and, in the same year, the Faraday Gold Medal from The Royal Society. He was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (FMedSci) in 1998. He holds honorary doctorates at three universities.
He has approximately 300 scientific publications in learned journals (including Nature, Science, New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet) and various books, and writes regularly for the lay press.
His many interests have threatened to take him away from science altogether. As a young man he left medicine to direct an award-winning production of Pirandello at the Edinburgh Festival, and followed this by pursuing a short - and very successful ¬ career as an impresario. His other passions include opera and classical music ¬ he has appeared on quiz programmes on Radio 3 on several occasions - literature, chess, restoring classic cars, landscape gardening (particularly water-features), skiing and Arsenal.
He is involved with a number of UK charities, including the Imperial Cancer Research Fund ¬ of which he is a council member. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA) and a member of The Athenaeum.