Upcoming Issue

Vol. 7, No. 4
Jul–Aug 2001
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In Memoriam
Vulimiri Ramalingaswami (1921-2001)
Professor Vulimiri Ramalingaswami, international editor of Emerging
Infectious Diseases since 1998, was born on August 8, 1921, at Srikakulam,
Andhra Pradesh, India. He passed away on May 28, 2001, after a brief illness at
the All India Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, New Delhi, India.
Professor Ramalingaswami obtained his MBBS degree in 1944 from Andhra
University, his MD degree in internal medicine in 1946 from the same university,
and D.Phil. and D.Sc. degrees in 1951 and 1967, respectively, from Oxford
University, United Kingdom.
Professor Ramalingaswami’s research career started at Nutrition Research
Laboratories, Coonoor in the Nilgiris (now the National Institute of Nutrition,
Hyderabad) in 1947. Since then, he had been very active in various aspects of
medical research. He believed in pursuing basic knowledge for a better
understanding of causes and mechanisms of human diseases prevalent in developing
countries and in the application of that knowledge for human betterment. He
believed in promoting a meaningful synthesis of laboratory, clinical, and
community-based research. His areas of research were protein energy
malnutrition, iodine deficiency disorders, nutritional anemia, and liver
diseases in the tropics. He was interested in primary health care, infectious
diseases, and health research for development.
The most recent and ongoing activities of Professor Ramalingaswami were in
the area of new and reemerging infectious diseases, particularly in the
developing world. In 1994, India was struck suddenly by an outbreak of plague–bubonic
and pneumonic. A technical advisory committee on plague, established by the
Indian government under the chairmanship of Professor Ramalingaswami, reported
on the factors responsible for the outbreak and recommended steps for prevention
of such outbreaks in the future. The committee’s report, "The Plague
Epidemic of 1994," was submitted to the government in 1995 and was
published in 1996 in a special section of Current Science (71:781-806).
Professor Ramalingaswami was a fellow of the Royal Society; a foreign
associate of the National Academy of Sciences, USA; foreign member, Academy of
Medical Sciences, USSR; and past president of the Indian National Science
Academy. He received Doctor of Medicine degrees from several universities,
including the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
While presenting Dr. Ramalingaswami the Leon Bernard Foundation Award in
1976, Sir Harold Walter, president of the World Assembly, described him as
"Physician, research scientist, teacher, and humanist," a very apt
description of Professor Ramalingaswami.
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