While a student, with a friend doing a history PhD, he came across the story of sudor anglicus, the mysterious English sweating sickness of the 15th and 16th centuries.[2] In 1998, five years after the hantavirus outbreak in the US made headlines, and then working at St Thomas' Hospital, he co-authored a paper hypothesising that the mysterious medieval illness was very similar to that in the US and could have been hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.[2][6] After discovering the grave of Henry Brandon, who he believed had been affected by the illness, he did not propose plans to exhume the body for DNA analysis.[6]
Career
Thwaites trained in infectious diseases and microbiology at Brighton University, the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit (OUCRU) in Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam, and the Hospital for Tropical Diseases, London.[2][7] In Vietnam he was a Wellcome Trust Clinician Scientist Fellow and mentored by Nicholas White and Jeremy Farrar.[2] After more than four years there he returned to London, and two years later joined the MRC Centre for Molecular Bacteriology and Infection at Imperial College, where he worked on the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus.[2] He was appointed consultant at Guy's and St Thomas' in 2011.[2]
^ abc"Prof. Guy Thwaites". www.oucru.org. Oxford University Clinical Research Unit. Archived from the original on 7 January 2022. Retrieved 28 January 2022.