B.C. AIDS researcher among winners of $100,000 Killam Prize - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 10:24 PM | Calgary | -17.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. AIDS researcher among winners of $100,000 Killam Prize

Leading HIV/AIDS researcher Julio Montaner is among a group of scientists, writers, doctors and researchers receiving a prestigious prize for brilliant work in fields including health sciences, engineering and humanities.

Groundbreaking doctor Julio Montaner pioneered highly active antiretroviral therapy for HIV/AIDS

Dr. Julio Montaner, director for the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, holds a chart showing the decline of new AIDS cases in B.C. from 1983-2013. (Darryl Dick/Canadian Press)

Leading HIV/AIDS researcher Julio Montaner is among a group of scientists, writers, doctors and researchers receiving a prestigious prize for brilliant work in fields including health sciences, engineering and humanities.

The Argentine-Canadian is among five scholars awarded this year's Killam Prize, which honours Canadian researchers and scientists whose lifetime of work has impacted Canadians and citizens around the world.

Each receives $100,000 and will be honoured at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on May 30.

The groundbreaking Vancouver doctor, who heads the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, pioneered the highly active antiretroviral therapy and championed the "treatment as prevention" strategy.

Montaner is currently working with the World Health Organization on prevention strategies for viral hepatitis.

Other winners include University of Victoria scholar and lawyer John Borrows for his work to incorporate Indigenous legal concepts into the practice of Canadian law, and University of Toronto philosopher Tom Hurka for his work on moral and political philosophy.

Then there's evolutionary and molecular biologist W. Ford Doolittle of Dalhousie University, recognized for integrating the philosophy of biology and genomic research on notions of the "tree of life" and Gaia Theory; and University of Toronto researcher Molly Shoichet for her work on tissue and polymer engineering, focusing on targeted drug delivery, tissue regeneration and stem cell research.

Winners are chosen by a committee of their peers. Previous winners include Victoria Kaspi, the late Mark Wainberg, and Nobel Prize winner Arthur McDonald.

The Killam program also announced recipients of its research fellowships, which dole out $840,000 over two years to six scholars for independent research projects.

This year's group includes:

  • Roberto Abraham of the University of Toronto for a project called "Probing the Low Surface Universe with Dragonfly."
  • Deborah J. Cook of McMaster University for "Modifying the Microbiome in Critical Illness: The Potential of Probiotics."
  • Eric Helleiner of University of Waterloo for "Globalizing the Classical Foundations of International Political Economy."
  • Dominic McIver Lopes of University of British Columbia for "Being for Beauty: Aesthetic Agency and Value."
  • Louis Taillefer of Universite de Sherbrooke for "High-temperature Superconductivity."
  • Christine Wilson of McMaster University for "Dense Gas and Star Formation in Galaxies: An ALMA Archival Project."