Description

Book Synopsis
In Brain Fever, the internationally renowned medical scientist, Richard Moxon FRS, shares his experiences of bacterial meningitis, a fearful and devastating infection of the brain. In a clear, non-technical style, he explains what meningitis is, what causes it, who gets it and how research has come up with vaccines that can prevent it. A paediatrician, Moxon engages the reader in a compelling story of how chance, opportunity and passion drew him into researching the bacteria that are the lethal assassins of unsuspecting, previously healthy people, especially young children. The reader is taken on an exciting journey from his boyhood dream to study medicine to adventurous experiences as a junior doctor in London, a ship's surgeon and then a trainee in infectious diseases in Boston, USA. There he became hooked on a research career and in the subsequent four decades, first as a professor at Johns Hopkins and then at Oxford University, Moxon traces his personal involvement with an extraordinary and inspiring group of scientists who pioneered a milestone in medical history: the development of vaccines to prevent bacterial meningitis. In this must-read book, Brain Fever provides expert insight into what it takes to develop a vaccine. Moxon takes the reader from basic research through clinical trials to the logistics and politics of implementing a vaccine. As we are learning from the Covid-19 pandemic, it is vaccines that we rely on to fight and overcome the devastation caused by virulent pathogens. His message is clear and challenging: no other intervention in the history of medicine confers a greater public health benefit than immunisation.

Table of Contents
Prologue; A Bacterial World; Bacterial Assassins; The Making of a Physician Scientist; The Legacy of the Rockefeller Institute; Baltimore and the Johns Hopkins Hospital; The Devil Lies in the Details: Researching a Bacterial Assassin; A Needle in a Haystack; Reverse Culture Shock and the Dreaming Spires of Oxford; Vaccine Research and the Oxford Institute of Molecular Medicine; A Milestone in Immunisation; Sabbatical in the Mid-West; The Genomics Era, a Milestone in Biology; The Last Frontier: A Vaccine against MenB; Science, Politics and Societal Benefits; Epilogue;

Brain Fever: How Vaccines Prevent Meningitis And

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    A Paperback / softback by Richard Moxon

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      View other formats and editions of Brain Fever: How Vaccines Prevent Meningitis And by Richard Moxon

      Publisher: World Scientific Europe Ltd
      Publication Date: 01/07/2021
      ISBN13: 9781800610019, 978-1800610019
      ISBN10: 1800610017

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Brain Fever, the internationally renowned medical scientist, Richard Moxon FRS, shares his experiences of bacterial meningitis, a fearful and devastating infection of the brain. In a clear, non-technical style, he explains what meningitis is, what causes it, who gets it and how research has come up with vaccines that can prevent it. A paediatrician, Moxon engages the reader in a compelling story of how chance, opportunity and passion drew him into researching the bacteria that are the lethal assassins of unsuspecting, previously healthy people, especially young children. The reader is taken on an exciting journey from his boyhood dream to study medicine to adventurous experiences as a junior doctor in London, a ship's surgeon and then a trainee in infectious diseases in Boston, USA. There he became hooked on a research career and in the subsequent four decades, first as a professor at Johns Hopkins and then at Oxford University, Moxon traces his personal involvement with an extraordinary and inspiring group of scientists who pioneered a milestone in medical history: the development of vaccines to prevent bacterial meningitis. In this must-read book, Brain Fever provides expert insight into what it takes to develop a vaccine. Moxon takes the reader from basic research through clinical trials to the logistics and politics of implementing a vaccine. As we are learning from the Covid-19 pandemic, it is vaccines that we rely on to fight and overcome the devastation caused by virulent pathogens. His message is clear and challenging: no other intervention in the history of medicine confers a greater public health benefit than immunisation.

      Table of Contents
      Prologue; A Bacterial World; Bacterial Assassins; The Making of a Physician Scientist; The Legacy of the Rockefeller Institute; Baltimore and the Johns Hopkins Hospital; The Devil Lies in the Details: Researching a Bacterial Assassin; A Needle in a Haystack; Reverse Culture Shock and the Dreaming Spires of Oxford; Vaccine Research and the Oxford Institute of Molecular Medicine; A Milestone in Immunisation; Sabbatical in the Mid-West; The Genomics Era, a Milestone in Biology; The Last Frontier: A Vaccine against MenB; Science, Politics and Societal Benefits; Epilogue;

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