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Professor Leslie Spence was
instrumental in the control and prevention of epidemic
diseases in Trinidad. He is known for his work on
arboviruses[1], which
included the discovery of several new viruses, and for
his work on enteroviruses[2]
including the polio virus. As director of the Trinidad
Regional Virus Laboratory (TRVL), he developed the
field of diagnostic virology to serve Trinidad and
Tobago and the wider Caribbean.
Leslie Spence was born in St.
Vincent in 1922. He received his early education in St.
Vincent and Trinidad. He graduated in medicine from the
University of Bristol, England in 1950, then studied
tropical medicine at the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine from 1950 to 1951. In 1951, he
entered the Trinidad Medical Service and worked at the
General Hospital in Port-of- Spain and in the District
of Sangre Grande. In 1954, he was seconded to the
Trinidad Regional Virus Laboratory of the Rockefeller
Foundation and began a career in virology.
A year later, he undertook
postgraduate studies in virology at the Rockefeller
Foundation Virus Laboratories in New York City under
Nobel Laureate, Dr Max Theiler. He continued
postgraduate studies in bacteriology at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. In 1962, he
became Director of the Trinidad Regional Virus
Laboratory and Senior Lecturer in Microbiology at The
University of the West Indies (UWI), St. Augustine. He
later received a Personal Chair in Virology at UWI.
In 1968, Spence immigrated to Canada
where he was appointed Professor of Microbiology at
McGill University in Montreal. In 1972, he was
appointed Professor of Microbiology at the University
of Toronto and Microbiologist at the Toronto General
Hospital. He was elevated to Chairman of the Department
of Microbiology of the University of Toronto and Chief
Microbiologist at the Toronto General Hospital in 1983,
and retired as Professor Emeritus in 1988.
Professor Spence did significant
work on arboviruses in Trinidad and Tobago. Many of the
arboviruses he isolated with a team at TRVL in Trinidad
were new to science and others known to cause human
diseases had not been previously reported from Trinidad
and Tobago. He named three viruses after places in
Trinidad and Tobago – Mayaro, Oropuche and Tacaribe[3]. His discovery of a patient suffering from yellow
fever in Trinidad in 1954 led to the employment of
control measures which prevented a serious outbreak of
the disease in the rainy season. His virological
studies on an outbreak of poliomyelitis in Guyana in
1962 led to the application of polio control measures
in Trinidad and Tobago and the prevention of a similar
outbreak in his own country. Professor Spence is also
recognised for initiating and advancing rotavirus work
in Trinidad and Tobago. Rotaviruses are a major cause
of diarrhoeal disease in young children.
He served as a consultant to the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
and the National Institute of Health of the United
States. He was a member of the American Committee on
Arboviruses and various committees of the Pan American
Health Organization. He was Chairman of the Canadian
Medical Research Council’s Grant Committee for
Microbiology and Infectious Diseases from 1983 to 1986
and served on a number of committees of Health and
Welfare Canada and the Ontario Government.
Professor Spence is a Fellow of the
Royal College of Pathologists of England and a Fellow
of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Canada. In 1999, he received the Canadian Association
of Medical Microbiologists Founder's Award for
Distinction in Medical Microbiology.
1-An
arthropod-borne (group of invertebrates such as
insects, spiders, crabs, centipedes and millipedes)
virus, usually spread by a blood-sucking insect
2-A group of easily-replicated viruses e.g. the polio
virus, which causes polio
3-The Mayaro virus was mistaken in the past for dengue,
the Oropouche virus is considered to be one of the most
important viruses of its type and the Tacaribe virus
discovery changed the way scientists classified that
family of viruses
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