My main interests are randomised trial methodology, primary care mental health. MRC Doctoral Training Partnership in Biomedical Sciences - Programme in Biomedical & Translational Science Professor of Infectious Diseases. Michael King completed his medical studies in New Zealand before moving to the UK in 1978 to undertake training in family practice. He has served on numerous grant and fellowship review panels in the US and Europe is a Section Editor for the Open Access journal PLoS Pathogens, and an Editor for Virology.Room GH0402195, Department of Infectious Diseases, School of Immunology & Microbial Sciences, Floor 2, Borough Wing A team led by Professor Michael Malim from the School of Immunology & Microbial Sciences has…King's College London Jump To Ratings. Academics; Head of School, School of Immunology & Microbial Sciences. Michael J King (30% Match) Professor & Assistant Department Head Texas A&M University - Texas A&m University; CJU 201. Director, MRC Doctoral (PhD) Training Partnership in Biomedical Sciences. Shaw, A. M., Hyde, C., Merrick, B., James-Pemberton, P., Squires, B. K., Olkhov, R. V., Batra, R., Patel, A., Bisnauthsing, K., Nebbia, G., MacMahon, E., Douthwaite, S., Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

2.7 / 5. He then moved to the Maudsley Hospital in 1981 to train in clinical psychiatry before undertaking research training in psychiatric epidemiology at the former General Practice Research Unit (Institute of Psychiatry). I am Professor of Strategic Theory and served as Head of Department until August 2019. A comparative transcriptomic strategy using cDNA subtraction led to the identification, in 2002, of the human protein APOBEC3G as an anti-viral protein specifically targeted by Vif. The lab continues to work on the molecular pathogenesis of virus infections of importance to global health, particularly HIV-1 and influenza A virus and embraces a broad range of molecular genetic, cultured cell, biochemical, structural, bioinformatic and cohort-based methods to study fundamental principles of virus replication and host-mediated control.Michael has delivered many named lectures, received an Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation Scientist Award in 2001 and was awarded the 2010 M Jeang Retrovirology Prize.

He teaches epidemiology and trial methodology on a number of taught PhD courses in Spain, Argentina and Chile, two of which have been supported by the European Union. Michael Malim received his DPhil in Biochemistry from Oxford University in 1987 and then moved to Duke University in North Carolina to train as a virologist working on HIV-1, the virus that causes AIDS. risk prediction in mental health; the stress and stigma faced by gay and lesbian people; the mental health of patients in the late stages of cancer; and the role of religious and spiritual beliefs in mental well-being.Michael King’s teaching activities take place at a number of levels. Currently he supervises 5 ongoing PhD students and has previously supervised 22 PhD students to graduation.

Director, MRC Doctoral (PhD) Training Partnership in Biomedical Sciences. He was Director of the former Mental Health Sciences Unit and subsequently the Division of Psychiatry from 2009 to 2014. I undertake observational research which includes national surveys of mental health in the UK, research using large clinical data bases, and cohort studies in European populations to understand the risks for mental disorders. Head of School, School of Immunology & Microbial SciencesProfessor of Infectious Diseases.