Kenneth Warren: Great Neglected Diseases of Mankind
Kenneth Warren was a powerful figure in 20th-century medicine whose work transformed public health policy and tropical medicine and who left a profound legacy in global health thinking. A prolific writer and researcher, Warren was respected for his scientific research, winning awards and accolades, while his later role as activist, agitator, innovator, and connoisseur of science brought him international recognition. His career in medicine is remembered for three enduring achievements: 1) his efforts to introduce modern biomedical science to the study of infectious diseases in the developing world; 2) the proselytizing energy he brought to the ethical challenge of how to provide the most cost-effective health care to the world's poorest people; 3) and his tenure as Director of Health Sciences at the Rockefeller Foundation, during which time he inaugurated the Great Neglected Diseases of Mankind Programme.
Told through personal interviews with both Warren's supporters and detractors, the story of Warren's career, inexorably interwoven with the GND programme, is a compelling narrative that has not only enduring implications for current medical research, funding and healthcare across the globe, but also a long-standing legacy for the future ways in which we combat disease in the developing world.
Conrad Keating is the Writer-in-Residence at the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine at Oxford University. He is the author of the biography of the British epidemiologist Sir Richard Doll, Smoking Kills: The Revolutionary Life of Richard Doll. His most recent publication, Great Medical Discoveries: An Oxford Story, accompanied the exhibition Great Medical Discoveries: 800 Years of Oxford Innovation, which he curated for the Bodleian Library, Oxford. For the past 20 years, Keating has been dedicated to showcasing some of the biomedical stories that have advanced human wellbeing to a wider audience.