Robin Warren is an Australian pathologist who was conferred the prestigious Nobel Prize for the discovery of bacterium Helicobacter pylori
@Pathologists, Life Achievements and Facts
Robin Warren is an Australian pathologist who was conferred the prestigious Nobel Prize for the discovery of bacterium Helicobacter pylori
Robin Warren born at
It was while interning at the Royal Adelaide Hospital that he first met Winifred Williams. Ever since their first meeting, the two struck a chord together. The relationship materialized into marriage and the couple was blessed with five children.
Winifred Williams later became an accomplished psychiatrist.
Robin Warren was born on June 11, 1937 in North Adelaide, Australia in a middle-class family. He was the eldest child of Roger Warren and Helen Verco. While his father was one of Australia’s leading winemaker, his mother was employed as a nurse.
It was from his mother that the young Warren imbibed the love for profession of medicine. Though she never coaxed him to take up the same as a career option, he nevertheless always aimed to study medicine since young.
He attained his preliminary education from a local primary school, Westbourne Park School and thereafter enrolled at St Peter’s College in Adelaide to complete his secondary education.
Matriculating in 1954, he gained a Commonwealth scholarship that secured him free tertiary education at the medical college in the University of Adelaide in 1955. It was while at the university that he gained knowledge in various science subjects such as zoology, botany, physiology, biochemistry, pharmacology, embryology and histology.
Gaining a MBBS degree from the University of Adelaide, he joined as Junior Resident Medical officer at the Royal Adelaide Hospital. After completing his internship, he applied for the position of the registrar in psychiatry but could not make it through.
He then took up the profile of Registrar in Clinical Psychology at the Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science, a part of Royal Adelaide Hospital. The job profile included reporting on blood smears and bone marrow, examining faeces for parasites, examining urine and testing skin and nails for fungus. It was during this time that his interest in pathology was generated.
A year later, he took up the job of a Temporary Lecturer in Pathology at the Adelaide University. The work included researching on morbid anatomy and histopathology. Meanwhile, inspired and interested by the subject, he gained membership at the new College of Pathologists of Australia.
He later took up work as a Registrar of Clinical Pathology at the Royal Melbourne Hospital. It was while working in the profile that he gained tutelage under Dr David Cowling and Dr Bertha Ungar which enabled him to study further in haematology and microbiology.
Soon he was promoted to the position of Registrar in Pathology. By the end of his four years in Melbourne, he had gained college membership and had eventually become a full-fledged pathologist.
In 1994, he was awarded with the Warren Albert Foundation prize.
In 1995, he received an award by the Western Australian Branch of the Australian Medical Association. Same year, he was felicitated with the Distinguished Fellows Award by the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia for his distinguished Service to the Science and Practice of Pathology.
In 1996, he received the inaugural award at the First Western Pacific Helicobacter Congress for his contribution in medical science. Same year, he received a medal from the University of Hiroshima and Distinguished Alumni Award from University of Adelaide Alumni Association.
In 1997, the Paul Ehrlich Foundation, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universit�t and Frankfurt am Main, Germany jointly bestowed on him the Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Award for his discovery of Helicobacter pylori.
The University of Western Australia conferred upon him the prestigious Honorary degree of Doctor of Medicine in 1997. Same year, he was recognized as a guest speaker at the Centenary Meeting of the German Society of Pathology