deans-letter-2023

The Dean’s Letter by Professor Chak-sing Lau 2 December 2023

CONTENTS 4 Moving with the Times 6 Enriching Experience 7 Students as Partners 8 Adopting AI and Other Technologies 12 Mix and Match 13 Global Networks 14 Patient Benefits 18 Always, People First 20 2022-23 Honour Roll

The Dean’s Letter by Professor Chak-sing Lau 2 December 2023

The Dean’s Letter 2023 Moving with the Times I start with good news. Over the past few months, the Faculty has had some very encouraging feedback about the quality of our teaching and research. In September, the Medical Council of Hong Kong (MCHK) conducted its regular review of the MBBS programme and gave glowing initial feedback about our facilities and our students. Although the full report is not yet available, the signs are that the MCHK believes we are progressing in all the right directions in training the healthcare professionals of tomorrow. With that, I wish to thank all members who were involved in the exercise and helped to showcase our strengths. The details will follow, but let me highlight two things that this feedback reveals. First, we do not cease to stay abreast of new developments and find opportunities to lead the way, most recently with Generative AI (GenAI). I will give a more detailed account on this below. Second, our achievements are made possible because of the hard work and commitment of our staff and students. As a Faculty, we cultivate this commitment by putting people first – whether they are new or existing staff, new or existing students or, like yourselves after today, alumni of HKUMed. We look after all of our relationships and all of our people, and I hope our new graduates will view today not as an end, but as the beginning of the next stage of your journey with the Faculty. Having said that, there are a number of opportunities and challenges ahead of us. Our success will depend as much on how we tackle them as what we do. We have therefore adopted a bottom-up approach that involves input from both students and staff – from our people at all levels – on everything from figuring out the best way to incorporate new technologies into the classroom, to identifying new collaboration points among disciplines. This input is helping my team and I to develop forward-looking strategies and deepen our networks across Hong Kong, the region and the world – including with our alumni – so that we can strengthen the impact of our work. 4

Illustrations by Serena Yue, MBBS Class of 2025 5 THE DEAN’S LETTER

Enriching Experience A prime area where we are going above and beyond is in education. As you will all have experienced, an education at HKUMed is not only about building skills and knowledge. We aim to provide enrichment opportunities to all students so they can gain deeper insights about themselves, their chosen professions and society in general. This will make them better professionals and better people. We first embedded enrichment experiences in the MBBS curriculum – effectively carving out time for students to explore other disciplines, spend time in other parts of the world, develop their research skills and/or serve the community – and this has proven to be very successful. Over the past couple of years, several students who pursued an MRes in their Enrichment Year had their research published. This year, we added a Distinguished MedScholar track, which admitted 60 outstanding students who will receive intensive research training in their Enrichment Year, with a view towards PhD studies after they complete their MBBS. At the same time, enrichment experiences are being rolled out across almost all our other programmes. Nursing has a Life Enrichment Learning Programme that offers opportunities for exchanges to top universities overseas, as well as service activities, research attachments and more. Similarly, Pharmacy’s Enrichment modules give students opportunities for overseas exchanges, while its experiential education programme takes students into a wide variety of settings, from clinics to hospitals to industry. Biomedical Sciences took students on an educational trip to Singapore early this year and has launched a new entrepreneurship capstone course that provides hands-on experience in the world of startups. Students from the Global Health Development programme spend six months being mentored by leading organisations, such as UN agencies, in places such as Jakarta in Indonesia, Phnom Penh in Cambodia and Sao Tome in Africa. To name a small selection of the opportunities offered to our students. The interesting thing is this: enrichment is not a one-way provision. The Faculty recognises that our students can also enrich us and our curriculum, especially in this age of rapid technological change. We therefore have taken steps to establish our students as partners as we move down new, untrodden paths. 6

Students as Partners Over the past four years, medical students have been encouraged to become involved in teaching and curriculum development through our Students in Medical Education initiative – SIME, for short – which also recognises that teaching is an important part of the professional life of healthcare workers. This is closely intertwined with technological development because novel technologies are new to teachers and students alike, and we must learn from each other how to tap the potential as well as address issues such as authenticity, privacy and data security. To advance both goals and extend them to students in all programmes, we recently appointed Dr Gary Lau Kui-kai as the Director of Education Technology (EdTech) and SIME. Dr Gary Lau Director of EdTech and SIME Dr Jian Yang Deputy Director of EdTech (AR/VR) Dr Joshua Ho Deputy Director of EdTech (AI) 7 THE DEAN’S LETTER

Adopting AI and Other Technologies We adopt new technologies to enhance our work, not simply because they are there, and we have a strong track record of succeeding in this goal. The MCHK accreditation team gave us early positive feedback on our adoption of cutting-edge technologies, such as the virtual patient simulator and VR in Nursing, the Techmezz and the Anatomage. Digital assessments and telehealth have been integrated into our teaching. And, in the past few months, a lot of effort has been focused on GenAI, which offers a good example of how HKUMed and the University as a whole are responding to technological change. The University has issued a policy and guidelines to all Faculties and developed training materials for both teachers and students. Here at HKUMed, we adapted the policy to provide more elaborate guidance to students to ensure their use of GenAI still aligns with the registration standards for professional licensing bodies. Teachers have also been given guidelines on things like adapting unsupervised assessments with alternative tasks to demonstrate that the work is the student’s, such as asking them to submit hand-written care plans and make short video demonstrations. Moreover, with a generous HK$30 million donation from Mr Li Ka-shing, which the Faculty has matched, we will be expanding our digital teaching and learning capacity through hardware, software and human capital. Our focus will be on GenAI, big data and informatics, and we will be providing grants and scholarships to students with academic excellence in AI technologies. I would like to point out here that the first year of our revived BSc (Bioinformatics) has attracted high-quality students. We have already identified some ways in which AI can offer unique input into learning, such as analysing team interpersonal communication skills and teaching students how to train data to help interpret x-ray results. To get an idea of what student involvement can mean, let me give you some examples from our experiences with medical students. Under the SIME programme, they have partnered with educators to co-design over 20 teaching and learning innovations, such as interactive e-learning sets, interactive diagrams and gamified learning. They have also been involved as near-peer tutors in problem-based learning sessions and online sessions for pre-clinical students – the tutors are senior students and their participation not only helps their junior counterparts, it helps the tutors to consolidate their knowledge. This year we will introduce near-peer tutors for clinical students. There is certainly room for such initiatives in our other programmes in future. Some of these examples involve new technologies. Many of our students have been playing with and using technological devices from infancy and they are well-positioned to give rich and useful feedback on what is and is not useful to learning. SIME can help us, as a Faculty, move with the times and with our students. 8

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Mix and Match Our strategy for teaching and learning – involving students in curriculum development and the adoption of transformative technologies – finds an echo in our research strategy, too. We are rewarding young talent through the HKU Research Fellowship Scheme for Clinical Academics, which has been enhanced to be more inclusive and allow for overseas research training. We are also making concerted efforts to break down barriers, especially between disciplines, and encouraging a bottom-up approach. In the spring, we piloted a series of mini retreats for Chairs and Directors of Departments and Schools to help cultivate more synergies for research collaborations between clinicians and scientists. Following from that, the School of Clinical Medicine launched its research mixers, which are open to staff across HKUMed. The mixers have a format: brief talks are given around a chosen theme, followed by informal discussions over lunch. The first mixer, held in June, was on that topic we are all talking about – AI and Big Data in Medicine – and the second was on cancer and personalised medicine. These gatherings encourage our scholars to share their ideas about complex issues and, we hope, consider how they can join together to answer them. Already, the mixers have made progress through the establishment of the Research Data Collaboration Task Force. This will guide the formation of a framework and ultimately a facility for big data collaboration that all researchers in the Faculty will be able to share, access and utilise. I have also used the Dean’s Fund to establish the HKUMed Collaboration Booster Fund to support a team science approach towards high-impact, innovative projects that have high translation potential. The emphasis on collaboration also finds tangible form in our ongoing efforts to develop biomedical engineering. We have received HK$28 million from the University Grants Committee to upgrade the Pauline Chan Building with dedicated facilities for biomedical engineering, such as a digital health lab, 3D printing lab and medical robotics lab. The work will be completed in the next academic year. We will also be working with the Faculties of Engineering and Dentistry to co-host the Biomedical International Symposium next June. Another promising development is the planned Greater Bay Area International Clinical Trial Institute, announced in the Policy Address of Hong Kong’s Chief Executive in October. HKUMed has cross-disciplinary expertise in clinical trials and associated networks in the GBA and Hong Kong, and we are most keen to contribute to this initiative. 12

Global Networks Collaboration is not only encouraged within the University. Our scholars work closely with their counterparts around the world. These global networks are critical for advancing research to benefit patients, as our work during the COVID-19 pandemic showed. Our success there recently brought us a major reward in the form of a large donation to strengthen preparation for the next pandemic. Last month, we signed an MoU with The Hong Kong Jockey Club that provides us with a special donation to establish The Hong Kong Jockey Club Global Health Institute that headquarters at HKUMed. We will be collaborating with the University of Cambridge and the International Vaccine Institute to centralise and co-ordinate pandemic preparedness at the academic and industrial levels; to translate research into practical preventative interventions such as vaccines; and to advance the equitable access and affordability of these interventions and technologies. At the same time, Professor Yuen Kwok-Yung has teamed up with Professor David Ho of Columbia University, who has worked with HKUMed for many years, to create a global Pandemic Research Alliance. They are building on the legacy of Hong Kong and HKU in dealing with pandemics and infectious diseases over more than a century and they have brought in partners including the University of Melbourne, Duke-Singapore National University, Tsinghua University and Guangzhou National Laboratory. These initiatives come alongside our ongoing collaborations. In just the past three months, we held a symposium with the Francis Crick Institute on infection, immunity, stem cell, cancer research and emerging biomedical technologies, and a joint symposium with the University of Cambridge on the future of medical sciences that also celebrated the 100th anniversary of the Department of Medicine. The Master of Trinity College at Cambridge, Professor Dame Sally Davies, spoke in October at the Inaugural Gabriel Leung Lecture. And the School of Chinese Medicine marked its 25th anniversary with the 12th Pong Ding Yuen International Symposium on Chinese Medicine, which looked at the globalisation of Chinese medicine and integrative medicine and attracted participants from the region, Europe, North America and Australia. 13 THE DEAN’S LETTER

Patient Benefits Our efforts to continuously improve our teaching and research, and widen our networks of collaboration, all have one goal in mind, which is to benefit patients. We want to ensure that our curricula and research ultimately translate into better patient outcomes. Here, too, we need to move with the times. In a sense, there is also a bottom-up focus developing in patient care. Primary healthcare, which starts well before patients should ever need hospital care, has at long last been given a boost by the government. The Primary Healthcare Blueprint was released a year ago – Professor Sophia Chan Siu-chee in the School of Nursing, who was formerly Hong Kong’s Secretary for Food and Health, played a major role in its development – and it outlines the establishment of 18 district health centres across Hong Kong. Their purpose is to be a first point of contact for patient care, chronic disease management, health promotion and the like. From October this year, HKUMed assumed the role of Medical Consultant in three of these centres. This will have multiple benefits for patients and for us, enhancing professional training for our students and research into primary care. 14

Over the past year, we have also introduced a multi-source feedback system for clinical services. This recognises that patient care is not simply about disease outcomes, but involves broader aspects of competence, such as interpersonal skills, compassion, professionalism and trust. Health systems around the world are increasingly assessing such competencies and it dovetails very well with our efforts to promote a People First culture in HKUMed. Our staff have also been very good at identifying ways to engage with the community to promote health and provide people with sound, reliable information. Just to cite a few recent examples, Dr Wendy Chan Wing-lok and her team have launched ‘Support+’ to raise awareness of palliative care and help cancer patients and their families. The HKU Stroke team has collaborated with community partners to help stroke patients and their caregivers. And our many HKUMed scholars, especially those from the School of Nursing and the School of Public Health, have been at the forefront of the campaign for tobacco control to protect our city from the irreversible harms of tobacco consumption. 15 THE DEAN’S LETTER

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Always, People First People First is not only related to our clinical work. It is also about our staff and students. As a Faculty, we aim to nourish our people by listening to them – through townhalls, retreats and the like – involving them in HKUMed’s development, and providing opportunities for self-care. Yoga sessions and city farming have recently been initiated on campus to provide short, therapeutic breaks from the bench, the bedside and the computer. We have a Student Wellness Team that provides a range of counselling and psychotherapy services and organises wellness-related events. In all of our endeavours, we aim to enhance connectivity among people at all levels and respond to them. I cannot emphasise enough how important this is to me. At a seminar in July, a student asked me how I would define success for HKUMed – how I would tell that I am doing a good job. I feel this is not measured simply by our ranking in the world or how good we are perceived to be in Hong Kong. It is not measured only by how many research papers we publish or how many grants we receive. It is also reflected in how the best students and staff want to be part of the HKUMed family, and how they enjoy themselves while they are here. And how alumni, donors and other valued partners want to contribute to our growth. As graduating students, you will always remain part of the HKUMed family. As I said at the outset, this is the first part of your journey with us. I hope you have gained not only skills and knowledge but also valuable insights and friendships. We will always welcome you back with open arms. I hope, in turn, that you will be proactive in passing the benefits on to the next generation of students and join us by contributing to the future work and success of HKUMed. For now, take the greatest pleasure in celebrating your achievements and moving forward to the next stage of your professional development. My warmest congratulations to each of you. 18

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2022-23 Honour Roll 20

Professional Recognition and Honours/Awards (Teams) International • Dr Victor Leung Yu-leong and his team (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) won the Best Poster Presentation Award at the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine International Society Asia-Pacific Chapter Conference (TERMIS-AP) 2022. • Dr Ng Ming-yen and Dr Varut Vardhanabhuti (Diagnostic Radiology, SClinMed) were ranked among the top 10 finalists of the 2023 EdX Prize for Innovation in Online Teaching for their course ‘Advanced Cardiac Imaging’ in September 2023. National • Dr Hu Yong (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) and his team were awarded Champion of the Steady-State Visual Evoked Potential (SSVEP) contest ( 騰訊雲杯「技術賽SSVEP 賽項第一名」) from the 2023 World Robot Contest (WRC) in August 2023. • Dr Loey Mak Lung-yi (Medicine, SClinMed) and team were awarded the Top 10 Original Research Articles in Portal Hypertension and Cirrhosis 2022(2022年度中國門脈高壓與 肝硬化十大原創研究)by Chinese Portal Hypertension Alliance (CHESS中國門靜脈高壓聯盟) in July 2023 for the paper ‘Glycemic burden and the risk of adverse hepatic outcomes in patients with chronic hepatitis B with type 2 diabetes’ published in Hepatology. • Dr Michael To Kai-tsun (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) and his multidisciplinary Osteogenesis Imperfecta team at HKU-Shenzhen Hospital received the Golden Snail Award 2023 for Medical or Scientific Achievement. His team also received an award in the first ‘ 閏笛杯’ of the National Rare Disease Education Video Competition 2023. Local Extramural • Professor Christopher Leung Kai-shun and Dr Alexander Lam Ka-ngai (Ophthalmology, SClinMed) were awarded Outstanding Glaucoma Artificial Intelligence Diagnostic Platform for their startup, AIROTA Diagnostics Limited, by ETNet in September 2023. Intramural • Professor Ian Wong Chi-kei (Pharmacology and Pharmacy) and team members – Professor Esther Chan Wai-yin, Dr Francisco Lai Tsz-tsun and Miss Nicole Fung (Pharmacology and Pharmacy); Dr Eric Wan Yuk-fai and Dr Carlos Wong King-ho (Family Medicine and Primary Care, SClinMed); Dr Shirley Li Xue (Medicine, SClinMed); and Dr Celine Sze Ling-chui (Nursing) were presented the Faculty Knowledge Exchange Award 2023 for the project ‘Big-data pharmacovigilance of COVID-19 vaccines shapes public health policies’. • Dr Raymond Li Hang-wun (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) and his Reproductive Medicine Team from HKU-Shenzhen Hospital were presented the Outstanding Team Award - Silver Award by the HKU-Shenzhen Hospital in 2022. 21 THE DEAN’S LETTER

Professional Recognition and Honours/Awards (Individuals) International • A total of 31 Faculty members were named Highly Cited Researchers 2023 by Clarivate Analytics: – Professor Ester Cerin (Public Health)# – Professor Chen Honglin (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Chen Zhiwei (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Vincent Cheng Chi-chung (Microbiology, SClinMed)# – Professor Benjamin John Cowling (Public Health) – Professor Ivan Hung Fan-ngai (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lai Ching-lung (Medicine, SClinMed)# – Professor Gabriel Matthew Leung (Public Health)# – Professor Mak Tak-wah (Pathology, SClinMed)# – Professor Malik Peiris (Public Health) – Professor Leo Poon Lit-man (Public Health) – Professor Kelvin To Kai-wang (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Joseph Wu Tsz-kei (Public Health) – Professor Kelvin Yeung Wai-kwok (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) – Professor Yuen Kwok-Yung (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Jasper Chan Fuk-woo (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Chan Kwok-hung (Microbiology, SClinMed)# – Dr Chan Wan-mui (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Chu Hin (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Kok Kin-hang (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Tommy Lam Tsan-yuk (Public Health) – Dr Eric Lau Ho-yin (Public Health)# – Dr Kathy Leung Sze-man (Public Health) – Dr Anthony Raymond Tam (Medicine, SClinMed)# – Dr Wu Peng (Public Health) – Dr Yen Hui-ling (Public Health) – Dr Cyril Yip Chik-yan (Microbiology, SClinMed)# – Dr Yuan Shuofeng (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Anna Zhang Jinxia (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Jane Zhou Jie (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Mr Cai Jianpiao (Microbiology, SClinMed) # Honorary Professoriate 22

• A total of 65 Faculty members were ranked by Clarivate Analytics as the top 1% worldwide by citations: – Professor David Makram Bishai (Public Health) – Professor Daniel Chan Tak-mao (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Eric Chen Yu-hai (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Professor Chen Honglin (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Chen Zhiwei (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Cheung Tan-to (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Benjamin John Cowling (Public Health) – Professor Feng Yibin (Chinese Medicine) – Professor Guan Xin-yuan (Clinical Oncology, CancerMed, SClinMed) – Professor Guan Yi (Public Health) – Professor Rina Hui Yee-man (CancerMed, SClinMed) – Professor Ivan Hung Fan-ngai (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Jin Dong-yan (Biomedical Sciences) – Professor Lai Ching-lung (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lau Yu-lung (Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Anne Lee Wing-mui (LKS Faculty of Medicine - HKUHS) – Professor Lo Chung-mau (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Lu Liwei (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Mak Tak-wah (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Irene Ng Oi-lin (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor John Malcolm Nicholls (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Malik Peiris (Public Health) – Professor Leo Poon Lit-man (Public Health) – Professor Walter Seto Wai-kay (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Sham Pak-chung (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Professor Shen Jiangang (Chinese Medicine) – Professor Kelvin To Kai-wang (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Tse Hung-fat (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Wang Man-ping (Nursing) – Professor Wang Yu (Pharmacology and Pharmacy) – Professor Carmen Wong Chak-lui (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Ian Wong Chi-kei (Pharmacology and Pharmacy) – Professor Joseph Wu Tsz-kei (Public Health) – Professor Xu Aimin (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Kelvin Yeung Wai-kwok (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) – Professor Yuen Kwok-Yung (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Richard Yuen Man-fung (Medicine, SClinMed) – Dr Sheikh Taslim Ali (Public Health) – Dr Jasper Chan Fuk-woo (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Chan Kit-wa (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Raymond Chang Chuen-chung (Biomedical Sciences) – Dr Chang Wing-chung (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Chu Hin (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Daniel Fong Yee-tak (Nursing) – Dr Daniel Ho Sai-yin (Public Health) – Dr Ho Pak-leung (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Christy Hui Lai-ming (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Kok Kin-hang (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Tommy Lam Tsan-yuk (Public Health) – Dr Edwin Lee Ho-ming (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Kathy Leung Sze-man (Public Health) – Dr Liao Qiuyan (Public Health) – Dr Simon Lui Sai-yu (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Catherine Mary Schooling (Public Health) – Dr Parco Siu Ming-fai (Public Health) – Dr Siddharth Sridhar (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Tian Linwei (Public Health) – Dr Tim Tsang Kam-lun (Public Health) – Dr Wong Sook-san (Public Health) – Dr Jessica Wong Yuen-ting (Public Health) – Dr Wu Peng (Public Health) – Dr Yen Hui-ling (Public Health) – Dr Yuan Shuofeng (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Jane Zhou Jie (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Maria Zhu Huachen (Public Health) 23 THE DEAN’S LETTER

• A total of 75 Faculty members were ranked among the Top 2% Scientists Worldwide 2023 in their specialty areas by Stanford University: – Professor Kyongtae Tyler Bae (Diagnostic Radiology, SClinMed) – Professor Daniel Chan Tak-mao (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Eric Chen Yu-hai (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Professor Chen Honglin (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Stephen Cheng Wing-keung (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Kenneth Cheung Man-chee (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) – Professor Annie Cheung Nga-yin (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Raymond Cheung Tak-fai (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Cheung Tan-to (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Cheung Yiu-fai (Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Chow Shew-ping (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) – Professor Chu Kent-man (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Benjamin John Cowling (Public Health) – Professor Fan Sheung-tat (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Guan Xin-yuan (Clinical Oncology, CancerMed, SClinMed) – Professor Guan Yi (Public Health) – Professor Ho Pak-chung (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) – Professor Ivan Hung Fan-ngai (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Mary Ip Sau-man (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Patrick Ip (Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Michael Garnet Irwin (Anaesthesiology, SClinMed) – Professor Dora Kwong Lai-wan (Clinical Oncology, CancerMed, SClinMed) – Professor Kwong Yok-lam (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lai Ching-lung (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lai Kar-neng (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lam Ching-wan (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Cindy Lam Lo-kuen (Family Medicine and Primary Care, SClinMed) – Professor Karen Lam Siu-ling (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lam Tai-hing (Public Health) – Professor Brian Lang Hung-hin (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Chak-sing Lau (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lau Yu-lung (Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Law Wai-lun (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Simon Law Ying-kit (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Anne Lee Wing-mui (LKS Faculty of Medicine - HKUHS) – Professor Christopher Leung Kai-shun (Ophthalmology, SClinMed) – Professor Leung Suet-yi (Pathology, SClinMed) 24

– Professor Leung Wai-keung (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Leung Wing-hang (Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Raymond Liang Hin-suen (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Lin Chia-chin (Nursing) – Professor Lo Chung-mau (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Keith Luk Dip-kei (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) – Professor Stephanie Ma Kwai-yee (Biomedical Sciences) – Professor Man Kwan (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Ernest Ng Hung-yu (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) – Professor Irene Ng Oi-lin (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Hextan Ngan Yuen-sheung (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) – Professor John Malcolm Nicholls (Pathology, SClinMed) – Professor Malik Peiris (Public Health) – Professor Leo Poon Lit-man (Public Health) – Professor Timothy Hudson Rainer (Emergency Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Walter Seto Wai-kay (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Sham Pak-chung (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Professor Kathryn Tan Choon-beng (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Sydney Tang Chi-wai (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Kelvin To Kai-wang (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Tse Hung-fat (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor William Ignace Wei (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Ian Wong Chi-kei (Pharmacology and Pharmacy) – Professor Joseph Wu Tsz-kei (Public Health) – Professor Xu Aimin (Medicine, SClinMed) – Professor Kelvin Yeung Wai-kwok (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) – Professor Doris Yu Sau-fung (Nursing) – Professor Yuen Kwok-Yung (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Professor Richard Yuen Man-fung (Medicine, SClinMed) – Dr Lawrence William Baum (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Jasper Chan Fuk-woo (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Chen Haiyong (Chinese Medicine) – Dr Chung Ka-fai (Psychiatry, SClinMed) – Dr Daniel Fong Yee-tak (Nursing) – Dr Ho Pak-leung (Microbiology, SClinMed) – Dr Tommy Lam Tsan-yuk (Public Health) – Dr Judith Mak Choi-wo (Pharmacology and Pharmacy) – Dr Yen Hui-ling (Public Health) 25 THE DEAN’S LETTER

• Professor Jason Cheung Pui-yin (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) received two Best Basic Science Awards from the APSS 6th Annual Meeting @ Spineweek 2023 for the papers ‘Core Planar Cell Polarity Genes VANGL1 and VANGL2 in Predisposition to Congenital Scoliosis’ and ‘The Electromyographic Discrepancy of Paravertebral Muscles Predicts an Early Curve Progression of Untreated Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis’ in May 2023. • Professor Kenneth Wong Kak-yuen (Surgery, SClinMed) became President Elect of the Asian Association of Pediatric Surgeons (2024-2026) in November 2022. He also became President Elect of the Pacific Association of Pediatric Surgeons (2024-2025) in September 2023. • Professor Doris Yu Sau-fung (Nursing) was inducted as 2023 Fellows of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA) at the GSA’s 2023 Annual Scientific Meeting in November 2023. • Dr Amy Cheung Yim-ling (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) won the 2022 International Society of Orthopaedic Surgery and Traumatology (SICOT) Research Awards – Best Paper from Female Researcher / Clinician Award. • The following Faculty members were awarded the Healthy Longevity Catalyst Awards (Hong Kong) in the Healthy Longevity Global Competition held by the US National Academy of Medicine in October 2023: – Dr Geng Leiluo (Medicine, SClinMed) – Dr Ralf Jauch (Biomedical Sciences) – Dr Rio Sugimura (Biomedical Sciences) • Dr Herbert Kwok Wang-chun (Medicine, SClinMed) received the APSR Travel Award in August 2023 to the JRS Annual Meeting 2024. Dr Kwok was also appointed to be editor in SciBase Critical Care and Emergency Medicine in September 2023. • Dr Jojo Kwok Yan-yan (Nursing) was awarded the Emerging Nurse Researcher/Scholar Award 2023 by Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing at the 34th International Nursing Research Congress in July 2023. • Dr Wendy Lam Wing-tak (Public Health) was elected President of the International Psycho-oncology Society from 2023 to 2025 in September 2023. Dr Lam also received the 2023 Distinguished Merit Award by the International Society of Nurses in Cancer Care in October 2023. • Dr Elaine Lee Yuen-phin (Diagnostic Radiology, SClinMed) was awarded Distinction for her oral presentation at the 22nd International Cancer Imaging Society Meeting and Annual Teaching Course for the paper ‘Treatment response evaluation by PET/CT after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in advanced ovarian cancer’ in September 2023. • Dr Kathy Leung Sze-man (Public Health) was named one of the ‘11 Early-Career Researchers to Watch’ by Nature Medicine in 2022. • Dr Philip Li Hei (Medicine, SClinMed) was appointed as member of the ‘Expert Committee to Investigate Recent Incidence of Drug Allergies and Their Aftereffects’ by the Sri Lanka Ministry of Health in July 2023. • Dr Loey Mak Lung-yi (Medicine, SClinMed) received the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Emerging Leader Award in July 2023. • Dr Kendrick Shih Co (Ophthalmology, SClinMed) was selected as the Hong Kong representative for the 2024 Asia Pacific Academy of Ophthalmology Leadership Development Programme. • Dr Tse Ka-yu (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) was appointed as Co-Chair of Cervical Cancer Elimination Committee of the Asia and Oceania Federation of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (AOFOG) (2022-2024). • Dr Pauline Yeung Pui-ning (Critical Care Medicine Unit, SClinMed) received the Assembly Education Award at the 26th Congress of the Asian Pacific Society of Respirology in November 2022. Dr Yeung was also selected as one of the Outstanding Authors (2022) by the Journal of Thoracic Disease. 26

National • Professor Liu Kui (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) was ranked among the Elsevier Highly Cited Chinese Researchers 2022 for exceptional research performance in the field of biology in March 2023. • Professor Yuen Kwok-Yung (Microbiology, SClinMed) was appointed Honorary Dean of the Shanghai Institute of Infectious Disease and Biosecurity in October 2023. • Dr Jasper Chan Fuk-woo (Microbiology, SClinMed) received the 8th VCANBIO Award for Biosciences and Medicine (Innovation Breakthrough Award) by the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences and VCANBIO Cell & Gene Engineering Corporation Limited in September 2023. • Dr Tommy Lam Tsan-yuk (Public Health) was bestowed the Zhong Nanshan Youth Science and Technology Innovation Award in July 2023. • Dr Kendrick Shih Co (Ophthalmology, SClinMed) was appointed as a Founding Member of the Tear Film and Ocular Surface Society China in September 2023. • Dr Michael To Kai-tsun (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) was appointed Deputy Director of Guangdong Provincial Center for Healthcare Quality Management in Rare Diseases ( 廣東省罕見病診療質量控制中心) (2023-2025) in March 2023. • Dr Yuan Shuofeng (Microbiology, SClinMed) was awarded the Excellent Young Scientists Fund (Hong Kong and Macau) in September 2023. Local Extramural • Professor Gilberto Leung Ka-kit (Surgery, SClinMed) was appointed as a Member of Research Council, Health Bureau, HKSAR Government (2023-2025) in September 2023. • Professor Judy Yam Wai-ping (Pathology, SClinMed) was awarded the RGC Research Fellowship 2023/24. • Dr Jasper Chan Fuk-woo (Microbiology, SClinMed) was appointed as Member of The Hong Kong Young Academy of Sciences (YASHK) in September 2023 with effect from January 2024. • Dr Karen Chan Kar-loen (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) was elected President of the Hong Kong College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (2022-2024). • Dr Herbert Kwok Wang-chun (Medicine, SClinMed) was appointed as a Council member of Hong Kong Medical Association (2023-2024). Dr Kwok was also elected as VicePresident of Hong Kong Public Doctors’ Association (2023-2024). • Dr Lam Chor-yin (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) was appointed Vice Chairman of Occupational Safety & Health Council in August 2023. • Dr Allie Lee (Ophthalmology, SClinMed) was named Distinguished Young Fellow, Hong Kong Academy of Medicine, in 2023. • Dr Kendrick Shih Co (Ophthalmology, SClinMed) was elected as a Council Member of the College of Ophthalmologists of Hong Kong in August 2023. • Dr Siddharth Sridhar (Microbiology, SClinMed) received the Lo Ying Shek Chi Wai Foundation Award for Young Investigator 2022-23. • Dr Alan Wong Siu-lun (Biomedical Sciences) was awarded the BOCHK Science and Technology Innovation Prize 2023 in the field of ‘STIP in Life and Health’. Intramural • Professor Yuen Kwok-Yung (Microbiology, SClinMed) was conferred the Honorary University Fellowship in 2023. • The following Faculty members received Faculty Clinical Service Excellence Awards (CSEA) 2023: – Professor Ava Kwong (Surgery, SClinMed) – Professor Yiu Kai-hang (Medicine, SClinMed) – Dr Henry Fu Chun-him (Orthopaedics and Traumatology, SClinMed) 27 THE DEAN’S LETTER

National • The Reproductive Medicine Team comprising Professor William Yeung Shu-biu (Obstetrics and Gynaecology, SClinMed) received RMB10M for the Sanming Project of Medicine (High-level Professional Program) in Shenzhen in 2023. Local Extramural • Professor Guan Xin-yuan (Clinical Oncology, CancerMed, SClinMed) was granted HK$62.971M under the Themebased Research Scheme 2023/24 (Thirteenth Round) of the Research Grants Council for the project ‘Investigation of the Immunosuppressive Microenvironment in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma’. • Professor Benjamin John Cowling (Public Health) was granted HK$30.06M under the Strategic Topics Grant 2023/24 of the Research Grants Council for the project ‘Improving Pandemic Preparedness by Reflecting on Experiences in the COVID-19 Pandemic from Different Perspectives’. • Professor Christopher Leung Kai-shun (Ophthalmology, SClinMed), in collaboration with Orbis, received HK$10M from Ling Charitable Foundation Limited for glaucoma research programmes and the project ‘Vision Matters: Glaucoma AIROTA Screening Project for 50+’ in 2023. Professor Leung also received HK$10M from TPK Kwok Family Charitable Fund for the project ‘Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Kwok Charity Cataract Surgery and Research Programme’ in 2023. • Dr Michael Ni Yuxuan (Public Health) and his team received a generous donation for their project ‘Health and Wellbeing Barometer for Hong Kong: Enrichment and Replenishment of the FAMILY Cohort’ with the generous support from the WYNG Foundation. Major Research Support 28

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