China Daily

MEDICINE MAN ON A MISSION

From studying cancer to establishi­ng a network of medical schools in China, Nicholas Lemoine is not one to give up. Liu Xiangrui reports.

- Contact the writer at liuxiangru­i@ chinadaily.com.cn

Nicholas Lemoine says China’s opportunit­ies and chal attraction. lenges are its The 60-year-old British medical expert has been the dean of the Academy of Medical Sciences at Zhengzhou University in the capital city of Central China’s Henan province since 2015.

He’s a renowned expert in molecular oncology, gene therapy, translatio­nal medicine and management of medical institutio­ns. And Lemoine is a fellow of both the Academy of Medical Sciences and the Royal College of Pathologis­ts in the United Kingdom.

He also serves as the director of the Barts Cancer Institute in the UK.

Lemoine has published nearly 300 papers in various publicatio­ns, which have won him more than 20 internatio­nal academic awards.

He first visited China in 1989, when he was invited to give lectures at a few hospitals in Beijing. He didn’t return until 2005, when one of his colleagues who had a connection with Zhengzhou invited him to visit.

He had a chance to meet with Henan’s provincial governor and forged a good relationsh­ip with the president of Zhengzhou University, who was keen on developing internatio­nal links.

Lemoine was soon invited to be a guest professor at the university. With his help, the university soon establishe­d the Sino-British Research Center for Molecular Oncology with Queen Mary University of London in 2006.

Lemoine has led the center in research in such areas as oncolytic virotherap­y, individual­ized molecular diagnosis and treatment.

The center has garnered more than 16 million yuan ($2.4 million) in funding. It has published 25 high-level papers and has been granted three patents.

“It’s more than 10 years old and has had some really exciting discoverie­s,” Lemoine says.

In 2014, the center was approved by the Ministry of Science and Technology as a national-level joint research center for cell and gene therapy — the first in this field in China.

Lemoine is excited about his current work as the dean. He has had an opportunit­y to completely redesign the school by drawing from advanced internatio­nal management systems.

“The management has been the exciting part of what the last two years have been about,” he says.

The new system has different management and evaluation methods for research platforms and staffers, and he intends to help the university construct an internatio­nal “talent zone”.

He says progress has been much quicker than he imagined, and he is impressed by the speed of “making things happen” here.

But life is not without its challenges, he admits.

He has to deal with the management of human resources, particular­ly with the current quota system, which, he believes, makes it difficult to change people’s working styles.

So he has made special efforts to bring in internatio­nal faculty.

Also, he has brought several influentia­l internatio­nal medical experts, including Australian Nobel-Prize-winning physician Barry Marshall, to work for the academy’s research centers.

The school has more than 1,000 internatio­nal graduate and undergradu­ate students in medicine.

Such an internatio­nal environmen­t can help the faculty become more competitiv­e and benefit the students by exposing them to different cultures, he believes.

He is happy that he has been able to assemble a good team of committed people to support his venture, and the university president has been very committed to the internatio­nalization agenda.

“I’m two years into this now, and I am not going to give up,” he says of the reforms.

“Other parts of the university are looking at this, and recognizin­g that this is a good thing.”

His colleague Sun Xuelian appreciate­s the culture and ideas Lemoine is trying to spread among the co-workers.

Lemoine plays his role as a “serving leader” and has encouraged initiative among the employees, Sun says.

“He gives us no tasks, but a direction instead, and leaves the rest to us,” Sun says, adding that he only gives them suggestion­s based on his experience.

Despite the challenges, Lemoine finds there are special advantages to undertakin­g research here.

His school has eight affiliated hospitals in Zhengzhou — and one is among the largest in the world.

“It’s an enormous opportunit­y for me as a clinical researcher, with its huge amount of patients,” he explains.

He says his priority is to understand and design new ways to prevent and treat some common cancers in the region and let the clinical applicatio­n of their research results directly benefit the local people.

Lemoine has made special efforts to increase the university’s internatio­nal exposure, by helping it organize internatio­nal conference­s, such as the 2017 Esophagus Prevention Internatio­nal Conference held at the university. It brought together more than 300 medical profession­als from China and abroad.

With his assistance, the university is collaborat­ing with influentia­l internatio­nal counterpar­ts, including Cambridge University.

In the past few years, he has helped Zhengzhou University arrange for about 10 young scientists and doctors to train in the UK.

In recognitio­n of his contributi­ons, Lemoine was given the Friendship Award by the Chinese government in October.

The award is the highest honor given to foreigners who have made significan­t contributi­ons to the country’s social and economic developmen­t.

Lemoine spends more than half of the year in Zhengzhou and keeps a busy schedule.

He admits that the decision to divide his time between two sides of the world was not easy.

“But I think it’s the right decision. Most of the time, things work out fine when you are doing the things for the right reason and when you have a vision,” he says.

His department has won four national science grants. It also received one internatio­nal joint funding deal in 2017.

Meanwhile, its new internatio­nal-level research platform for basic research and translatio­nal medicine, set up with an investment of nearly 200 million yuan, began operating recently.

And he intends to establish a network of medical schools in China to tackle the main challenges the nation faces in medicine.

The management has been the exciting part of what the last two years have been about.” Nicholas Lemoine, dean of the Academy of Medical Sciences at Zhengzhou University

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Nicholas Lemoine has been the dean of the Academy of Medical Sciences at Zhengzhou University since 2015. The British medical expert devotes his time to reforming the school’s management system and promoting its internatio­nal cooperatio­n.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Nicholas Lemoine has been the dean of the Academy of Medical Sciences at Zhengzhou University since 2015. The British medical expert devotes his time to reforming the school’s management system and promoting its internatio­nal cooperatio­n.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong