UK's top COVID-19 virus hunter had a long and winding path to the top
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[March 19, 2021]
By Guy Faulconbridge
CAMBRIDGE, England (Reuters) - Sharon
Peacock, one of the world's top scientific warriors in the battle with
the 0.0001-millimetre virus that causes COVID-19, had to fight a much
more personal battle inside Britain's education system to rise to the
top.
Peacock, 61, is a globally recognised virus hunter: COVID-19 Genomics UK
(COG-UK), which she set up a year ago as the pandemic swept towards
Britain, has sequenced nearly half of all the novel coronavirus genomes
so far mapped around the world.
Her life story is a song to meritocracy and an illustration of how the
quiet kindness of strangers can change the fate of a young life.
But it is also a tale of how the British educational system almost
overlooked the talents of a young woman who would become a distinguished
Cambridge professor of microbiology and put her country at the leading
edge of sequencing a virus that has sown personal and economic
devastation across the planet.
Brought up in a working class family in the southern English county of
Sussex, Peacock failed a crucial exam still used in parts of the country
to pick out the smartest children at 11 years old.
"I didn't come from a scientific background. My parents were working
class and we didn't know anybody who had gone to university. A key
defining moment in my life was when I failed the '11+'," Peacock told
Reuters.
It meant she went to a second-tier secondary school, where the focus was
on practical skills like cooking, typing and needlework, rather than a
more academic grammar school.
Though fascinated by biology, she was barred from taking "O-levels" -
exams usually taken at 16 - in biology, chemistry and physics or modern
languages. Peacock left school at 16 to work in a grocery store, without
going on to study for the "A-levels" that are the usual route to
university for English school leavers.
When she was 17, she began work as a dental nurse.
"I really wanted to do nursing. This is where my scientific interest
really started to expand. So I moved from teeth to patients," Peacock
said.
'ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIED'
Without the right scientific qualifications, Peacock had trouble getting
into nurse training but managed to talk her way in and qualified as a
nurse focused on end-of-life care.
Peacock was on a male medical ward watching a junior doctor examining a
patient when she discovered her future.
"I thought: 'this is absolutely incredible - I really want to do that',"
she said. "But I was terrified to tell anyone that I wanted to do it as
they would have probably found it quite comical. It was a Eureka moment
for me."
She returned to study, taking O-levels at night school and her A-levels
part-time at technical college.
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Sharon Peacock, director of COVID-19 Genomics UK, poses for a
portrait on the grounds of the Wellcome Sanger Institute's 55-acre
campus south of Cambridge, Britain March 12, 2021. REUTERS/Dylan
Martinez
After twice failing to get into medical school she rang up
Southampton University to tell them how much she wanted to study
medicine and met the admissions tutor, David Wilton.
"We were looking for something special, what I would describe as a
bit of 'sparkle'," Wilton, now emeritus professor of biochemistry at
Southampton, told Reuters.
"The mature applicants were particularly special as they normally
arrived via less orthodox educational routes and had usually
overcome many obstacles."
Peacock was offered a place.
She credits Wilton with changing her life and said the turning point
showed just how important minor acts of kindness could be.
"I haven't looked back since. I have absolutely loved being a
medical student, a doctor and now a microbiologist," she said. "It
was a defining moment for me - a moment of kindness from somebody
can make a huge difference to someone's life."
Wilton said he was delighted that Peacock has been so successful.
VIRUS HUNTER
Fast forward 40 years and after stints in London, Thailand and
Oxford, Peacock is a professor at Cambridge.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson's former chief adviser, Dominic
Cummings, told parliament that one of the fields in which Britain
could be considered a scientific world leader was in the hunt for
new coronavirus variants - Peacock's work.
"It's obviously patchy - there are some fields in which we are a
superpower. The first thing that comes to mind is the genetic
sequencing of the COVID variants," Cummings said, though he
cautioned that more broadly Britain was falling behind globally in
science.
Peacock says the British education system has improved since her
time, though she felt children could be introduced earlier to the
wonders of science.
Now, encouragingly, there are more female role models.
"Particularly during the pandemic, the role of women has been
absolutely phenomenal - we're not short of role models which is
great for encouraging girls and women into science."
So what is her advice for girls and women considering science?
"Really go for it and don't be afraid to take a risk."
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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