Médaille d'Or Paul Chibret

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Médaille d'Or Paul Chibret

The Médaille d'Or Paul Chibret is an award for personalities who have made a name for themselves in the field of international ophthalmology . The cooperation between French and German scientists is particularly recognized. The award should not be confused with the Chibret Award .

The award of the medal is combined with a guest scholarship for a research assistant in the partner country.

Historical background

The medal commemorates Paul Chibret (1844–1911), co-founder and first President of the French Ophthalmological Society (Société Française d'Ophtalmologie, SFO). This created a conciliatory atmosphere between the Germans and the French in the statutes, made it possible for Theodor Axenfeld to appear as rapporteur at the most important SFO event in 1906 and for ophthalmologists from Lorraine and Alsace to attend the annual meetings in Paris. To avoid scheduling conflicts with the German companies, the SFO meeting is always held in May.

Sponsorship

1974-2010: Chibret Pharma

Paul Chibret encouraged his nephew Henry Chribret (pharmacist) to manufacture and develop new ophthalmic products (eye drops). This gave rise to the large family company Chibret , which merged into the multinational MSD in 1969 , but was still responsible for very valuable market launches, especially in glaucoma therapy. Chibret Germany, based in Haar near Munich, is the donor of the medal.

The entire MSD group has been withdrawing from ophthalmology since 2008.

Since 2013: Théa Pharma

Henry Chibret's grandson Henri founded Théa in 1994, which again specialized in ophthalmic products. After MSD withdrew from the eye area, the company took over the sponsorship.

Medal holder

Source:

  • 1974 - Fritz Hollwich, Münster
  • 1976 - Hans Remky , Munich
  • 1978 - Alfred Bronner, Strasbourg
  • 1979 - Wolfgang Straub, Marburg
  • 1980 - Henri Saraux, Paris
  • 1981 - Pierre Amalric , Albi
  • 1983 - Rudolf Klöti, Zurich (CH)
  • 1984 - Frederic. C. Blodi, Iowa (USA)
  • 1985 - Jean Royer, Geneuille
  • 1986 - Jean Michiels, Louvain (B)
  • 1989 - Josef Wollensak, Berlin
  • 1990 - Mireille Bonnet, Lyon
  • 1991 - Herbert Baurmann, Königswinter
  • 1992 - Jean Luc Seegmuller, Strasbourg
  • 1993 - Rolf Grewe, Münster
  • 1994 - Henri Hamard, Paris
  • 1995 - Christian Hartmann, Berlin
  • 1996 - Hubert Bourgeois, Paris
  • 1997 - Hellmut Neubauer, Cologne
  • 1998 - Gisèle Soubrane, Créteil
  • 1999 - Klaus Dilger, Ingolstadt
  • 2000 - Jean Flament, Strasbourg
  • 2001 - Holger Busse , Münster
  • 2002 - Jean Paul Adenis, Limoges
  • 2003 - Anselm Kampik , Munich
  • 2004 - Jean Dufier, Paris
  • 2005 - Peter Rieck, Berlin
  • 2006 - Jean Louis Arne, Toulouse
  • 2007 - Gabriele Lang, Ulm
  • 2008 - Serge Morax, Neuilly
  • 2009 - Franz Grehn , Würzburg
  • 2010 - Jean-Antoine Bernard, Paris
  • 2011 - Günter K. Krieglstein
  • 2012 - Pierre-Yves Robert, Limoges
  • 2013 - Thomas Reinhard, Freiburg
  • 2014 - Carl Arndt, Reims
  • 2015 - Berthold Seitz , Homburg / Saar
  • 2016 -
  • 2017 - Frank Holz, Bonn
  • 2018 - Jean-Marc Pérone
  • 2019 - Claus Cursiefen

Individual evidence

  1. History - Theapharma. Retrieved January 6, 2018 .
  2. History - Theapharma. Retrieved January 6, 2018 .
  3. Winner 2017 - DOG. Accessed January 7, 2018 (German).
  4. DOG: Chibret Medal 2009. (PDF) 2009, accessed on January 7, 2018 .
  5. DOG: Chibret Medal 2011. (PDF) 2011, accessed on January 7, 2018 .
  6. ^ Deutsches Ärzteblatt: Chibret Medaille 2013. 2013, accessed on January 7, 2018 .
  7. Berthold Seitz receives Chibret gold medal . ( kaden-verlag.de [accessed on January 7, 2018]).
  8. DOG: Chibret Medal 2017. (PDF) 2017, accessed on January 7, 2018 .
  9. La médaille Paul d'Or Paul Chibret 2018 décernée au Docteur Jean-Marc Pérone - CHR Metz-Thionville. In: chr-metz-thionville.fr. June 11, 2018, accessed October 2, 2018 (French).
  10. DOG: DOG prices and research grants 2019 (PDF; 4.2 MB) September 6, 2019, accessed on October 3, 2019 .