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The Heatley Medal and Prize

 

Venki Ramakrishnan receives the Heatley Medal from Steve Busby, April 2008.

 

Past recipients of

the Heatley Medal and Prize

The Heatley Medal and Prize

The Heatley Medal and Prize is awarded for exceptional work that makes biochemistry widely accessible and usable, or for achievements that enable widespread progress and understanding.

 

The recipient of the Heatley Prize receives the medal, an honorarium of £2000 and the prize lecture, which is given at a Biochemical Society conference, is published in Biochemical Society Transactions.

 

History: Dr Norman Heatley is known as the scientist who overcame wartime shortages to make the production of penicillin possible and his role in paving the way for mass production is well documented in his obituaries in 2004. Dr Heatley worked closely with the Society's Industrial Biochemistry and Biotechnology Group (IBBG) and the Group originally sought nominations for the award.