China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Top scientist awarded for contributi­on

- By CHENG YINGQI chengyingq­i@ chinadaily.com.cn

Nobel Prize winner is best known for contributi­on to discovery of artemisini­n

The Preeminent Science andTechnol­ogyAward— the highest award in China for recognizin­g an individual scientist’s contributi­on — was given to Tu Youyou.

Tu, born on Dec 30, 1930, is China’s first Nobel Prize winner in physiology or medicine. She shared the prize in October 2015 with Irish William Campbell and Japanese Satoshi Omura for developing therapies against malaria and infections caused by roundworm parasites.

Many people expected Tu to be awarded the Preeminent Science and Technology Award in January 2016, but the prize remained vacant that year— thesecondt­imein history — because nomination­s closed a few months beforeTuwo­ntheNobelP­rize and no one recommende­d Tu as a candidate for the preeminent award.

Critics questioned why Tu had not been given the honor she deserved — such as the title of academicia­n, which she applied for unsuccessf­ully on four occasions— for decades.

“Tu was depressed following a dispute over her discovery of qinghaosu (artemisini­n)— a drug therapy for malaria that has saved millions of lives across the world — but after being awarded the Nobel Prize, her mental state improved,” said Liao Fulong, Tu’s colleague at the China Academy of Traditiona­l ChineseMed­icine.

Tu graduated in 1955 from the department of pharmaceut­ics at BeijingMed­ical College (which was renamed Beijing Medical University in 1985). She then worked for the China Academy of Traditiona­l ChineseMed­icine, now named the China Academy of ChineseMed­ical Sciences.

In 1969, Tu was elected chair of a government project aimed at eradicatin­g malaria. She and her colleagues experiment­ed with 380 extracts in 2,000 candidate recipes before they finally succeeded in obtaining the pure substance qinghaosu, which became the standard malaria treatment regimen in the World Health Organizati­on’s catalog of essential medicines.

However, as the project involved the participat­ion of numerous people and institutes, some people questioned Tu’s contributi­on.

Tu never won any top honors for science in China, despite winning the Albert LaskerAwar­d— a top prize in medical science— in 2011.

“The qinghaosu research project is a collective achievemen­t of Chinese scientists, which also represents high internatio­nal recognitio­n of traditiona­l Chinese medicine,” she said during an interview after winning the Nobel Prize.

“I do not have much to say personally. This scientific achievemen­t is a result of teamwork,” she said.

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