Richard Tedder

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University College London Medical School
, and worked as virologist at Public Health England

Life

The youngest son of Marshal of the Royal Air Force Lord Tedder, Richard Tedder was born 1946 and educated at Dauntsey's School, Glenalmond College, the University of Cambridge and the Middlesex Hospital. He holds degrees in Zoology and Medicine; he has been a Medical Virologist since 1975.[1]

He was research assistant to Richard Harrison at the

University College London Medical School in 1981, head of the Division of Virology there in 1982, continuing to 1995, in 1991 being appointed a professor of medical virology. He became head of the Department of Virology in 1995.[2]

In 2001, Tedder wrote to

2001 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth crisis
, such as the efficacy of vaccinations and the way the virus spreads. Tedder wrote that "it came as something of a surprise" to him that Follett had not involved any virologists in his work.

On

severe acute respiratory syndrome, or Sars, he said in 2003 "What Sars has done is rekindle the concept of the global village. Somebody's problem on a peninsula in South East Asia is Toronto's problem a few days later."[3]

Tedder's first published work was on

Department of Health, Royal College of Pathologists and SHA working parties and groups in the fields of virology and pathology.[1]

Other appointments

Membership of professional bodies

References