Fellows of the British Pharmacological Society are members who have demonstrated distinction and peer recognition in pharmacology.
Fellows have made, and may continue to make, substantial contributions to the disciplines of pharmacology, clinical pharmacology and therapeutics, through their work, publication and presentation of research, leadership, and contribution to Society life.
Find out more and apply for Fellowship.
This directory has been created to increase the visibility of our Fellows and their contributions, and to support networking by providing a useful resource for members to connect with Fellows with similar areas of interest.
Here you can find profiles of each Fellow, including information on their institutional affiliation, year elected, primary professional setting, affinity group membership, and a short biography.
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Chris has a PhD from the LMU Munich, MSc in Virology from Reading and BSc Hons in Biochemistry from Dundee.
Paul Spiers is an associate professor of Pharmacology in Trinity College Dublin.
Dr Katarzyna Starowicz is a distinguished pharmacologist with an H-index of 32 and over 3,832 citations (excluding self-citations).
Barbara Stefanska is an Associate Professor of Nutriepigenomics at The University of British Columbia, Canada.
My research interests are in the use of in vitro electrophysiology to investigate modulation of ion channels and receptors and their role in presynaptic function.
Alastair Stewart is a Professor of Pharmacology, Co-Director of the Lung Health Research Centre and Chair of Therapeutic Technologies Hallmark Research Initiative at the University of Melbourne.
Leigh completed her CASE PhD in molecular pharmacology on the then newly deorphansied free fatty acid G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) at the University of Glasgow, under the supervision of Prof Graeme Milligan.
I read Pharmacy at the School of Pharmacy, London (1969) and then I accepted an MRC Scholarship to undertake research for a PhD under Laurence Malcolm at Aberdeen, where I used microiontophoresis to study the pharmacology of individual, physiologically identified neurons in the neocortex.
Dr Jennifer Stott is a Senior Lecturer at St George’s University of London, being part of the core team that established the first BSc in Clinical Pharmacology.
Lisa completed her CASE PhD in 2016 at the University of Nottingham, under the supervision of Dr Nicholas Holliday and Prof Stephen Hill (Nottingham), and Dr David Hall (GSK).