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Scientist with Samrala roots makes history

NEW DELHI: Indian researcher Gagandeep Kang made history this Friday by entering the coveted league of scientists of the order of Issac Newton. An acclaimed biologist, Kang was formally inducted as the Fellow of Royal Societies (FRS) at a ceremony in London on July 12 presided over Nobel Laureate Venki Ramakrishnan, president of the Royal Society.

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Aditi Tandon

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, July 14

Indian researcher Gagandeep Kang made history this Friday by entering the coveted league of scientists of the order of Issac Newton. An acclaimed biologist, Kang was formally inducted as the Fellow of Royal Societies (FRS) at a ceremony in London on July 12 presided over Nobel Laureate Venki Ramakrishnan, president of the Royal Society. Her inauguration as the Fellow meant she signed the same prestigious Book of Fellows which Issac Newton signed in his life and times.

Kang is the first woman working in India to be elected to the Society in the 400-plus years of its history. She has been awarded the fellowship in recognition of her contribution to vaccine development in India and establishment of training programmes in clinical translational medicine.

Currently Executive Director at the Faridabad-based Translational Health Science and Technology Institute, Kang, whose family has roots in Punjab’s Samrala, has been the foremost leader in the development of the indigenous rotavirus vaccine now being used in select states on a pilot basis.

The vaccine will prevent child deaths from diarrhoeal diseases every year. Government data shows India loses 1.5 lakh children under five to diarrhoea annually. Of these, 50% deaths are due to rotavirus. “This is a huge feat. The election of Gagandeep Kang as the Fellow of Royal Society will inspire a whole generation of scientists in India. This is especially significant because entering FRS has always been a challenge for women scientists,” observed  Raghunath Anant Mashelkar, former Director General, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research. Kang was one of the 51 eminent scientists from across the world to become Fellow of the Royal Society this year. Previously Professor at Christian Medical College, Vellore, Kang is known for her inter-disciplinary research on transmission, development and prevention of enteric infections.

Biologist’s contribution

  • Brain behind the indigenous rotavirus vaccine being used in select states on pilot basis
  • The vaccine will prevent child deaths from diarrhoeal diseases
  • India loses 1.5 lakh children under five to diarrhoea annually
  • Of these diarrhoeal deaths, 50% are due to rotavirus
  • She is working on another indigenous vaccine, against typhoid
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