Professor Gene Feder elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences Fellowship

Professor Gene Feder OBE, Professor of Primary Care at the Centre for Academic Primary Care, University of Bristol, has been elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences’ respected and influential Fellowship. He joins 58 biomedical and health scientists selected for their exceptional contributions to the advancement of medical science.

Professor Gene Feder OBE
Professor Gene Feder OBE

The new Fellows, announced on Tuesday 21 May, have been recognised for their remarkable contributions to advancing biomedical and health sciences, groundbreaking research discoveries and translating developments into benefits for patients and wider society.

Awardees join an esteemed Fellowship of over 1,400 researchers who are at the heart of the Academy’s work, which includes nurturing the next generation of researchers and shaping research and health policy in the UK and worldwide. The expertise of Fellows elected this year spans a wide range of clinical and non-clinical disciplines, from midwifery to cancer stem cell biology.

Gene Feder, is a GP and Professor of Primary Care at Bristol’s Centre for Academic Primary Care, Bristol Medical School and Director of VISION, a UK Prevention Research Partnership (UKPRP) consortium.

Professor Feder leads ground-breaking national and international research on domestic violence and abuse (DVA) from epidemiology to health care response. He is the architect of IRIS, a national DVA programme for general practice, and co-founded IRISi, a social enterprise implementing IRIS nationally. He has extended his research globally through EU and Medical Research Council grants, and co-leadership of HERA, a National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Global Health Group in collaboration with researchers in Brazil, Nepal Sri Lanka, and the occupied Palestinian territories (oPT).

Committed to developing and evaluating effective and compassionate health care, Professor Feder has championed the use of randomised controlled trials to test improvements in general practice care of patients with heart and respiratory conditions, and robust methods to develop and implement clinical guidelines that make a difference to patients. He extended epidemiological, trial and meta-analytic methods to research on gender-based violence, combining quantitative and qualitive data to evaluate interventions, collaborating with statisticians, epidemiologists, economists, and social scientists. He has chaired four NICE guidelines and the World Health Organization (WHO) intimate partner and sexual violence guideline development group.

In 2012, he co-founded the Foundation for Family Medicine in Palestine, which aims to support universal health coverage throughout the occupied Palestinian Territories based on effective, efficient and high-quality primary care. In 2016, Professor Feder was awarded an OBE for services to health care and survivors of domestic violence. In 2022, Gene was appointed Director of VISION, a five-year UKPRP inter-disciplinary consortium researching the intersection of violence and health to reduce and mitigate the effects of violence through better measurement and analysis of health care, police, criminal justice, and voluntary sector data. He is an expert advisor to UK Government and WHO.

Also elected to the Fellowship is Eugenia Piddini, Professor of Cell Biology in the School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine at the University of Bristol. Professor Piddini is conducting innovative work to identify cell competition-based strategies to gain control over tissue colonisation, its impact in tissue colonisation in regenerative medicine and to prevent tumour expansion in cancer. You can read more about Professor Piddini’s work on the University of Bristol website.

Professor Andrew Morris PMedSci, President of the Academy of Medical Sciences, said:

“It is an honour to welcome these brilliant minds to our Fellowship. Our new Fellows lead pioneering work in biomedical research and are driving remarkable improvements in healthcare. We look forward to working with them, and learning from them, in our quest to foster an open and progressive research environment that improves the health of people everywhere through excellence in medical science.”

This year’s cohort marks a significant milestone in the Academy’s efforts to promote equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) within its Fellowship election. Among the new Fellows, 41 per cent are women, the highest percentage ever elected. Additionally, Black, Asian and minority ethnic representation is 29 per cent, an 11 per cent increase from the previous year. The new Fellows hold positions at institutions across the UK, including in Edinburgh, Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Nottingham and York.

Professor Morris added:

“It is also welcoming to note that this year’s cohort is our most diverse yet, in terms of gender, ethnicity and geography. While this progress is encouraging, we recognise that there is still much work to be done to truly diversify our Fellowship. We remain committed to our EDI goals and will continue to take meaningful steps to ensure our Fellowship reflects the rich diversity of the society we serve.”

The new Fellows will be formally admitted to the Academy at a ceremony on Wednesday 18 September 2024.

The Academy of Medical Sciences is the independent, expert body representing the diversity of medical science in the UK. Its mission is to advance biomedical and health research and its translation into benefits for society. The Academy’s elected Fellows are the most influential scientists in the UK and worldwide, drawn from the NHS, academia, industry and the public service.


Further information

About the Centre for Academic Primary Care

The Centre for Academic Primary Care (CAPC) at the University of Bristol is a leading centre for primary care research in the UK, one of nine forming the NIHR School for Primary Care Research. It sits within Bristol Medical School, an internationally recognised centre of excellence for population health research and teaching. Follow on X: @capcbristol and LinkedIn

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