Talk:David Dolphin

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Text introduced by user David Dolphin[edit]

The most-recent edit to the page replaced an existing biography with the below text. This edit was done by user "David.Dolphin", and the material appears credible. However, it's written in the tone of a resume, there is an apparent conflict of interest, and it replaced accurate and formatted text. I'm reverting the change, but preserving the material here for the sake of future editors who may want to mine it for additional details. --Lockley (talk) 17:20, 2 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

David Dolphin, the founding CEO of the British Columbia Innovation Council, has administrative and research experience in industry, universities and non-governmental organizations. As the Vice-President Technology Development at Quadra Logic Technologies he was instrumental for the discovery, development and commercialization of Visudyne, and the establishment of one of Canada’s most renowned university spin-off companies, QLT Inc. Visudyne has already saved the vision of hundreds of thousands of people afflicted with “wet” age-related macular degeneration. Visudyne is the most successful ophthalmic product ever registered, it has been approved in more than 70 countries; more than 600,000 patients have been treated and more than $3,000,000,000 of the drug has been sold.
Dolphin holds more than 160 patents (38 of them issued in the US) and has been internationally recognized for his industrial research. In 2002 David (along with Julia Levy) was awarded the Prix Galien. The Prix Galien has been described by the international pharmaceutical industry as the industry’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize and the highest accolade for pharmaceutical research(http://www.roche-hiv.com/Newsandfeatures/newsdet.cfm?hnid=311). In 2004 he was designated a Hero of Chemistry, the highest award the American Chemical Society gives to an industrial chemist.(http://www.chemistry.org/portal/a/c/s/1/feature_acs.html?id=c373e9ff535565448f6a17245d830100).
Dolphin obtained his Ph.D at the University of Nottingham in 1965 and then moved to Harvard University where he spent a year as a Postdoctoral Fellow with Nobel Laureate Robert Burns Woodward. He then joined the faculty of the Chemistry Department at Harvard where he stayed for a decade before moving to UBC in 1974. He is a Emeritus University Killam Professor and the QLT/NSERC Industrial Research Professor in Photodynamic Technologies at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Before joining QLT he was the Acting Dean of Science at UBC and he has been acting V.P. Research at UBC in 1999-2000 and in 2005.
He is an internationally recognized expert in the areas of porphyrin chemistry and biochemistry and has been instrumental in the development of drugs for photodynamic therapy. He is the author and editor of eighteen books on spectroscopy, chemistry and biochemistry and has published over 400 research papers.
During his career Dolphin has trained many highly qualified personnel. He has graduated (or is currently supervising) 50 graduate students and 98 postdoctoral fellows and research associates. Many have moved out into academia an industry. Paul Bartlett was David’s first M.Sc. student and is now recognized as one of the leading organic chemist in North America. Richard B. Silverman was his first Ph.D student and has proved himself to be one of the leading biochemists in the world and Andrew Hamilton, another of David’s graduate students, is now the Provost at Yale. On the industrial side Veronica Sherra-Pangka is the President of Torcan (Aurora) and John Thornback the President of Resolution Pharmaceuticals (Mississauga). Both were postdoctoral fellows in David’s laboratory.
Dr. Dolphin is a Fellow of the Canadian Institute of Chemistry and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. He was elected a Guggenheim Fellow in 1980 and awarded a D.Sc. from his alma mater of Nottingham University in 1982. In 1990 he was awarded the Gold Medal in Health Sciences by the Science Council of British Columbia, was the 1993 recipient of the Syntex Award of the Canadian Institute of Chemistry and in the same year he was the recipient of the Bell-Canada Forum Award. He was awarded an Izaak Walton Killam Research Prize in 1996. He was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2001. He received the Friesen Rygiel Prize in 2002 and the same year he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (London). In 2004 he received the CSPS Award of Leadership in Canadian Pharmaceutical Sciences, the CUFA/BC Academic of the Year Award and the NSERC Award of Excellence. This year he was awarded the NSERC Herzberg Gold Medal, the Council's highest honour, which recognizes research contributions characterized by both excellence and influence. In addition to the medal, the winner is guaranteed $1 million to use for his own university-based research. In the spring of 2006 David was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada which is the country’s highest honor for lifetime achievement and service. In addition to his administrative experience at QLT and UBC David has sat on many boards including those of The Canadian Foundation for Innovation (Chair of the Governance Committee), Genome BC (Chair), TRIUMF, the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research and he was a founding board member of Neuromed Inc.

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