Awards & Recognitions
Ghana Health Service
Ghana Health Service, 2022
Ghana Health Service
Ghana Health Service, 2022
UGBS Business
UGBS Business Excellence Award, 2022
UGBS Business
UGBS Business Excellence Award, 2022
The West African Clinical Alliance
The West African Clinical Alliance Awards, 2021
The West African Clinical Alliance
The West African Clinical Alliance Awards, 2021
Millennium Excellence Foundation
Millennium Excellence Foundation, 2021
Millennium Excellence Foundation
Millennium Excellence Foundation, 2021
Association of Ghana Industries, 2020
AGI Award
Association of Ghana Industries, 2020
AGI Award
EMY Africa Foundation
EMY Africa Awards
EMY Africa Foundation
EMY Africa Awards
JICA
JICA President Award
JICA
JICA President Award
British Council
Africa Knowledge Transfer Partnership Award
British Council
Africa Knowledge Transfer Partnership Award
ANDI Centre of Excellence
Innovation Award
1ST Ghana Premier Business & Finance Excellence
Special Gold Award
1ST Ghana Premier Business & Finance Excellence
Special Gold Award
Jubilee Business and Financial Services
Gold Award
Jubilee Business and Financial Services
Gold Award
Millennium Excellence Foundation
Millennium Excellence Award
Millennium Excellence Foundation
Millennium Excellence Award
Navrongo Health Research Centre
Plaque of Honour
Navrongo Health Research Centre
Plaque of Honour
Ghana Biomedical Convention
Appreciation Award
Ghana Biomedical Convention
Appreciation Award
Ghana Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (GFELTP)
Appreciation Award
Ghana Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (GFELTP)
Appreciation Award
Professor William Ampofo
MTN Hero of Change, Health Sector, 2022
Professor William Ampofo
MTN Hero of Change, Health Sector, 2022
Professor William Kwabena Ampofo, Coordinator for the Ghana National COVID-19 Testing and Professor at the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana won the 2022 MTN Hero of Change award (Health Sector). His enormous contribution to the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic was recognized with this honor.
Prof. Ampofo contributed his knowledge as a professional virologist during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ghana. Within the first week after the virus was discovered in the nation, Prof. Ampofo and his team acquired the supplies and equipment needed to set up and begin testing for COVID-19. Prof Ampofo also oversaw the innovation of the pooling sample system to test about 10,000 samples a day. Over 500 entries were received, screened narrowed down to 100 at first, then 30. A team visited each of the project sites to verify the submissions. The panel of three judges selected the top-10 projects which were televised in a 13-week series
Prof. Ampofo’s research interests include molecular and serological investigations, anti-viral therapy and viral disease burden. In addition to overseeing the National HIV Drug Resistance Genotyping Laboratory and the National Influenza Center, Prof. Ampofo also acts as the laboratory focal point for the Ministry of Health's National Emergency Operations Center.
The MTN Heroes of Change Season 6 (COVID Edition) was launched on 23rd of February 2022 to recognize individuals and institutions who have made significant contribution to the nation's effort to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Jewelna Akorli
ASTMH/BMGF Annual Meeting Travel Awards, 2022
Dr. Jewelna Akorli
ASTMH/BMGF Annual Meeting Travel Awards, 2022
Dr. Irene Owusu Donkor
Young Investigator award, 2022
Dr. Irene Owusu Donkor
Young Investigator award, 2022
Dr. Prince Asare
Africa Research Excellence Fund, 2022
Dr. Prince Asare
Africa Research Excellence Fund, 2022
Dr. Jewelna Akorli
Senior Category of the 2nd PAMCA Women in Vector Control (WIVC) Excellence Award, 2022
Dr. Jewelna Akorli
Senior Category of the 2nd PAMCA Women in Vector Control (WIVC) Excellence Award, 2022
Dr. Frederica Partey
Africa Research Excellence Fund, 2022
Dr. Frederica Partey
Africa Research Excellence Fund, 2022
Dr. Dorotheah Obiri
Africa Research Excellence Fund, 2022
Dr. Dorotheah Obiri
Africa Research Excellence Fund, 2022
Dr. Obiri was a recipient of the 2022 AREF Research Development Fellowship Programme and her project, which will be conducted at the University of Cambridge with her as a Principal Investigator, will focus on ‘training in experimental study design, bioinformatics, and placental transcriptomics to build placental research capacity in Ghana’.
Dr. Dorotheah Obiri is a Research Fellow with the Department of Immunology. She envisions a world where maternal mortality is eliminated and a key aspect of her research is channeled into investigating pregnancy complications associated with the placenta. Dr. Obiri has a strong interest in understanding maternal and fetal interactions to improve pregnancy outcomes and lifelong health of women and unborn babies in sub-Saharan Africa. Her active disease areas are preeclampsia, placental malaria, sickle cell disease, and COVID-19. The overarching goal is to identify novel targets and interventions through basic and translational research to provide further insights into preventive management, diagnosis, and treatment for these conditions during pregnancy.
Dr. Prince Asare
Vice Chancellor's Award, 2021
Dr. Prince Asare
Vice Chancellor's Award, 2021
On April 23, 2021, Dr. Asare received the "Vice Chancellor's Award for the Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation in the Sciences" for producing an outstanding doctoral dissertation in the scientific field. The honor was received at the University of Ghana Vice Chancellor's academic prizes ceremony for the 2019–2020 academic year, which honored exceptional University of Ghana students in several categories.
Dr. Asare was enrolled into a PhD programme at the department of Biochemistry, Cell And Molecular Biology at the University of Ghana as part of the second cohort of PhD students in the West African Centre for Cell Biology of Infectious Pathogens (WACCBIP) programme in 2015. He submitted and defended his thesis titled "Molecular Epidemiology Of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Complex In Ghana: Understanding Transmission Dynamics" and produced four publications from the thesis, having attended and presented in several local and international conferences.
He attended and presented at numerous regional and international conferences before submitting and successfully defending his thesis which resulted in four publications.
Dr. Irene Ayi
Supervisor for Best Phd Thesis, 2017
Dr. Irene Ayi
Supervisor for Best Phd Thesis, 2017
Dr. Kwadwo Asamoah Kusi
National Youth Achievers Awards, 2012
Dr. Kwadwo Asamoah Kusi
National Youth Achievers Awards, 2012
Dr. Kwadwo Asamoah Kusi of the Immunology Department of NMIMR is the recipient of a science achievement gold award at the 1st National Youth Achievers Awards (NYAA), held at the Accra International Conference Centre on 25th October 2012. The awards scheme was under the auspices of His Excellency John Dramani Mahama, Former President of the Republic of Ghana for youth (15 – 35 years) who are considered to have made a significant contribution to their field of endeavor.
The programme was organized by Charter House Productions with sponsorship from RLG Communications Ghana Ltd.
Dr. Kusi’s award was based on his PhD work on the development of malaria vaccine candidate antigens. He worked as part of a team that undertook the development and pre-clinical testing of three Diversity-covering (DiCo) AMA1 proteins as malaria vaccine candidate antigens at the biomedical Primate Research Centre in Rijswijk, the Netherlands. His work focused on the assessment of humoral immune responses to polymorphic variants of AMA1 and the formulation of multi-allele AMA1 antigens with adjuvants as vaccines. His contribution to this process resulted in five peer-reviewed publications.
The DiCo vaccine candidate, which is a mixture of the three DiCo antigens, has successfully undergone GMP production and is expected to undergo toxicology, clinical safety and immunogenicity assessment in a non-endemic population soon. These activities are with support from the European Vaccine Institute (http://www.euvaccine.eu/portfolio/project-index/ama1-dico and http://www.euvaccine.eu/node/651#KAK).
Dr. Kusi is currently working on the development of malaria transmission estimation tools at the Noguchi Memorial Institute together with scientists from the Naval Medical Research Centre of the US Military Malaria Vaccine Program.
Award received: 2012 National Youth Achievers Gold Award (Science category)
Dr. James Brandful
Vice Chancellor’s Award, 2012
Dr. James Brandful
Vice Chancellor’s Award, 2012
The Vice Chancellor’s Academic Prize was awarded to Dr. James A.M Brandful for Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation in Science for 2012 Congregation, Great Hall, May 4th, 2012. The award was based on his doctoral thesis leading to the degree of Ph.D. in Medical Microbiology obtained in June 2009.
A short summary of PhD thesis work
This was titled ‘Genotypic and Phenotypic Characterization of HIV Type 1 in Parts of Ghana’. The study examined 40 samples collected in 2002/3 from HIV-1 AIDS disease and asymptomatic patients prior to antiretroviral therapy (ART). The focus was on under-investigated areas of Ghana, covering the middle and northern belts. Genetic diversity and the potential for the emergence of resistance to antiretroviral drugs in this group and therefore implications for ART were examined.
Main observations included the following: A diversity of non-subtype B HIV-1 strains was prevalent. The simultaneous circulation of these diverse variants, even in a small sample size, suggested that changes in the genotypic profile of HIV-1 in Ghana will continue. Majority of the isolates were non-syncytium inducing R5 viruses even in late disease stage. Syncytium-inducing or X4 strains also co-circulated, but were rare. Genetic sequence data indicated that antagonists to R5 viruses could therefore be extremely effective theoretically as antiviral agents for HIV-1 strains from Ghana, along with two broad neutralizing monoclonal antibodies, namely 2F5 and 4E10.
The transmission of drug resistant (DR) HIV-1 strains through CRF02_AG, even before the initiation of ART was probable. PR V11I mutation, among others, was observed in patients with CRF02_AG and CRF06_cpx infections, recombinants chiefly now responsible for AIDS in Ghana. The use of darunavir (DRV) and fosamprenavir (FPV), not currently included in the ART regimen prescribed in Ghana had to be avoided in such patients.
The identification of DR-related mutations in drug-inexperienced patients constituted important new information that is relevant for ART in Ghana. Also, the study had far-reaching implications for possible new clinical interventions from phenotypic aspects of the work.
The diverse genetic profile of HIV-1 in Ghana has to be continuously monitored.