AIDS researcher to speak at SFU lecture event

Acclaimed AIDS researcher Dr. David Ho will discuss the AIDS Pandemic and Prospects for Control at the Simon Fraser University's downtown-Vancouver campus next week for its annual Munro Lecture event.


As a young physician David Ho saw some of the first known cases of AIDS. His pioneering work with “cocktails” of protease inhibitors and other antiviral drugs has brought about remarkable recoveries, and raised hope that the virus may, someday, be eliminated. Dr. Ho is director of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center in New York. In 1996 he was honored as TIME’s “Man of the Year” for his discoveries.
 
 David Ho was born Ho Da-i in the small city of Tai Chung, on the island of Taiwan. His father, who had served as a translator for U.S. troops in China during World War II, left David, his mother, and a younger brother behind to pursue graduate engineering studies in the United States. When Mr. Ho sent for his family, he chose new American names from the Bible, and Ho Da-i became David Ho. David and his brother arrived in the new land unable to speak English. Their father had insisted that they postpone learning the language until they came to America, so they would learn to speak with as little Chinese accent as possible.


The family initially settled in a largely black neighborhood in central Los Angeles, near the University of Southern California, where Mr. Ho was completing his master's degree. David spent his first months of school in frustrated bewilderment, unable to follow lessons in the unfamiliar language. He was ridiculed by his classmates for his inability to speak or understand, but within six months he had made progress in the language, and graduated with honors.


After high school he attended both MIT and Cal Tech as a physics major, but he soon decided molecular biology was most exciting field in modern science. He won a scholarship to Harvard Medical School and, as resident at UCLA Medical Center, saw some of the first documented cases of AIDS. He dedicated himself to combating the mysterious killer.

After the virus was identified, most researchers believed that the disease entered a dormant phase after the initial infection, since most patients did not become seriously ill until months or years after the first exposure. Dr. Ho's research proved that the virus actually multiplies in vast numbers from the very beginning, while the immune system exhausts itself fighting the virus. Armed with this discovery, Dr. Ho shifted attention from treatment of the final losing months of the disease and sought a way to fight the virus in the first stages of the infection. He devised the "cocktails" of protease inhibitors and other antiviral drugs which have brought about remarkable recoveries in may cases. It is hoped that continued use of these therapies may eliminate the virus entirely in persons already infected. Dr. Ho continues searching for improved treatments for AIDS, and to search for a vaccine which will eliminate the threat of AIDS altogether.


At age 37, David Ho was appointed Director of the new Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center in New York City. His breakthrough work with the treatment of AIDS moved Time Magazine to name him its Man of the Year in 1996. Lecture is scheduled on Mon Jan 21 7 pm at the Harbour Centre Campus,  515 West Hastings St. Vancouver Free admission. Seating is limited. Reservations: cs_hc@sfu.ca or 778.782.5100.


 


 

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