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Dr. Malcolm King
Champion of Aboriginal health looks to traditional remedies
By Joan Black
Windspeaker Contributor
Dr. Malcolm King, a prominent research scientist and professor
of the pulmonary division, department of medicine at the University
of Alberta, is the 1999 National Aboriginal Achievement Award
winner in the category of Medical Sciences. Dr. King's main area
of interest is mucus rheology, which is the study of the flow
of mucus in the lungs and other organs. His research is directed
to treat diseases such as asthma, bronchitis and cystic fibrosis;
it has led him to patent two therapies for chronic respiratory
disease.
The university's medical faculty dean, Dr. D. Lorne Tyrrell,
along with medical and dental students, nominated Dr. King on
the basis of outstanding achievements in his specialty, his stand
on Aboriginal health issues and his promotion of medical education
for Aboriginal people. Dean Tyrrell's letter of support for Dr.
King called him the "Champion for Aboriginal health issues
in the Faculty of Medicine and Oral Health Science's Curriculum
Innovation Committee."
Dr. King was born in 1947 on the Six Nations reserve in Ohsweken,
Ont., and is a member of the Mississaugas of New Credit First
Nation. His grandfather, who died in 1946, was a traditional
Native healer who learned about medicines from Dr. King's great-grandmother.
Unfortunately, he did not pass on this knowledge to any of his
four sons, one of whom was Dr. King's father, but Dr. King says
he's been told his grandfather treated even serious diseases
with traditional medicines.
Dr. King says he's very interested in exploring herbal medicine;
specifically, the use of traditional Native peoples' remedies
to treat respiratory illnesses. One of his students is examining
whether Canadian native plants can be grown commercially. He
adds there is some interest from Aboriginal organizations in
this venture.
Three years ago, Dr. King and a student examined how an extract
from rat root improved the excretion of mucus from the lungs.
It appears to help clear the lungs of infection; Dr. King wants
to learn more about the root's effects on inflammation and infection.
They also looked at several varieties of licorice root, which
in the laboratory works better than rat root in clearing mucus,
according to Dr. King. He has used the extract himself to treat
a cold.
"It's hard to get funding to carry on [the study of herbal
medicines], though," Dr. King says. He explains that drug
companies usually provide a major portion of research dollars,
but because natural products are not patented, the drug companies
are not interested in them. The other side of the coin is that
traditional Native healers "would not be interested in sharing
with drug companies."
Dr. King has had a passion for science since his youth, when
he attended elementary school on the Six Nations reserve. He
was the top student in his high school in Hagersville, Ont.,
and at age 17 went to McMaster University in Hamilton, where
he obtained a BSc in chemistry in 1968.
There was already a tradition of high academic achievement in
his family. His father, an elementary school teacher, had also
been a top student, and was the first person from his reserve
to graduate from university. Dr. King's brother is the principal
of the Mississaugas of New Credit elementary school.
In 1973, Dr. King obtained his doctorate in polymer chemistry
from McGill University in Montreal, Que. Several years of post-doctoral
training followed, during which time he became interested in
biomedical research. A lengthy faculty appointment at McGill
preceded a move to an assistant professorship at the University
of Alberta, which came about when Dr. King was awarded an Alberta
Heritage Foundation Scholarship in 1985.
In 1990, the award was renewed and Dr. King was promoted to full
professor in the department of Medicine. In 1992, he was elected
a Fellow of the American College of Chest Physicians, and this
year he received the latest in a string of scholarships and awards
dating back to the 1960s - the Alberta Lung Association Lorraine
Award of Excellence. He is also current president of the Canadian
Thoracic Society.
Dr. King has membership in numerous professional societies and
has a long history of participation on various boards. Since
1990, he has served on the Native Health Care Careers Committee
- as chairman since 1994. Nationally, Dr. King is chairman of
the Special Interest Group on Aboriginal Health Education of
the Association of Canadian Medical Colleges. He has also published
126 scientific papers and has lectured extensively abroad.
Lewis Cardinal, a Native student services spokesman at the university,
says Dr. King "is one of our great inspirations." Cardinal
says Dr. King is the epitome of a role model in a profession
where "we're largely short on role models."
Up to 15 Aboriginal medical students enroll yearly at the University
of Alberta.
"We accept only Aboriginals who meet the basic requirements,"
Dr. King says; "we have the same criteria all the way through
for Natives."
He points out that Native students are having fewer problems
with academic work than they once did, since they formed their
own self-help group. Still, basic science is not promoted enough
in Native communities and there are not enough enrichment programs
for Native students who could benefit from them, Dr. King says.
Dr. King has been designated to hold the position of associate
director in the University of Alberta's Centre for Aboriginal
Health Education and Research, which has been approved in principal
as a Canada-wide organization. Its aims are to increase the number
of Aboriginal students in medicine, dentistry and related professions,
and also to negotiate, as an institution, for research dollars.
There will be a Native majority on the board of directors, and
they will work on behalf of Native people in partnership with
the university, Dr. King told Windspeaker.
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