Emeritus Professor of Medicine and Honorary Senior Research Fellow in English, University of Bristol
Gareth Williams has extensively researched the ramifications of fear following epidemics, including polio and smallpox. His books include Angel of Death: the story of smallpox (shortlisted for the Wellcome Medical Book Prize 2010), Paralysed with Fear: the story of polio (2013)).
He has written 200 scientific articles and edited over 20 medical textbooks, including the prize-winning Textbook of Diabetes
Professor Williams grew up in Belfast, won a scholarship to Clare College, Cambridge to study medicine and qualified as a doctor with Honours in 1977. He built up an internationally renowned research group in diabetes and obesity in Liverpool and was Dean of Medicine at the University of Bristol, where he is now Emeritus Professor of Medicine and Honorary Senior Research Fellow in English.
Gareth is a former President of the Anglo-French Medical Society, has served as Chair of the Trustees of the Edward Jenner Museum and is proud to be an Ambassador of the British Polio Fellowship. He is often to be found playing the flute or saxophone in the vicinity of Bristol.

How a virus brought New York to a standstill in the summer of 1916
Apr 16, 2020 14:59 pm UTC| Insights & Views
A plague from nowhere, which threatens to kill millions worldwide and overturn civilisation. We cant treat it or protect ourselves against it, and our healthcare systems cant cope. Its a nightmare, but one that has visited...